Bullish ASX 200 On Daily Chart

 | Apr 02, 2019 01:01AM ET

The anticipated sell-off in the US bond market has played out well so far, with UST10z gaining a sizeable 10 basis points and settling at 2.50%. Although, we are seeing signs of buyers in Asia today and both nominal and ‘real’ UST10yr yields are 3bp lower.

The now universally watched UST 3m10y curve steepened by a massive 11bp yesterday, and out of the inversion, although traders have been keen to jump back into ‘flatteners’ today, and we see the curve flatter by 5bp through Asian trade. This sort of move gives us a belief that the scope for a steeper yield curve is limited.

The improvement seen in China’s PMI series yesterday gave us a warm fuzzy feeling and this was given new wind with US manufacturing ISM pushing above consensus to 55.3, while construction spending gained 1%. This data offset another weak US retail sales report, although there were some positive revisions to the January retail numbers and ultimately, we saw the Atlanta Fed Q1 GDP nowcast model pulled up 41bp to 2.12%. USD/JPY has pushed into the 200-day MA at 111.48, benefiting from the move in US yields, while it’s also worth pointing out we have seen a reasonable re-pricing in the US rates market, with 15bp of cuts for 2020 priced out of the market over the past few days.

The tape in the S&P 500 was a thing of beauty, with the cash index opening at its lows and closing towards the highs – it’s not just about how a market goes from A to B, but the overall quality of the journey is so important. Breadth was ok, with 78% of stocks higher on the day, led by financials who responded as one would expect to the steeper yield curve. The cyclical/defensive sector ratio increased by 1.8%, and the second-best day of the year. Granted, volumes were 5% below the 30-day average and could have been better, and one would have liked small caps to outperform the Russell closed +1%), but the bulls are in control of the equity market for now, and the prospect of new all-time highs in the S&P 500 is still on the cards.

US crude into $61.80 is helping sentiment, and again the breakout of the recent highs of $60.39 is naturally bullish, with the uptrend giving us little reasoning to be short here. The moves in the barrel are also helping a strong performance in the HY (high yield) /IG (investment-grade) credit spread, which continues to narrow and which loops into higher equity prices.