Trump Effect Wont Be Beat By NFP

 | Dec 02, 2016 06:47AM ET

Friday December 2: Five things the markets are talking about

It’s nonfarm payroll (NFP) day and the event risk is not for a stronger number, that’s been covered ad nauseam, but for such a disappointing headline print that will unravel some of the baked in Fed rate hike set for Dec 14. The signs of that happening have been non-existent.

So heading into the U.S jobs release (08:30am EST – +180k and +4.9% expected) the Trump “reflation” market rally seems to be running out of steam as fresh concerns over the outlook for the U.S. and stability in Europe are weighing on the ‘mighty’ buck and equities.

An anticipated pullback in wage growth after two consecutive months of solid increases could put a wrinkle in an otherwise upbeat November employment report – average hourly earnings are forecast to increase by +0.2% after rallying +0.4% in October.

The bond market is unlikely to move strongly after the release, given current bond valuations and political risks in Europe – U.S Treasury’s are already pricing in a lot of good news for the economy and the market will not be willing to sell product before this weekends Italian referendum and Austria’s Presidential election on Sunday.

A headline print close to expectations will have investors shifting their focus immediately back to Europe to further price in the “what if” scenario, something that capital markets has not been terribly good at this year.

1. Equities under pressure from the fading Trump effect

Asian shares were broadly lower overnight, mirroring yesterday’s losses stateside, pressured by the “Trump trade” being overdone.

Until now, the market has been betting that a Republican-led government would slash taxes and regulation, which would jump-start growth and inflation. It’s only natural to take a bit of the froth off the situation since so much had been priced in over the past three-weeks.

The Nikkei Stock Average closed down -0.5%, with a firmer yen pulling the index back from its year highs. The S&P/ASX 200 ended off -1.0%, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index was off -1.2% and Korea’s KOSPI finished -0.7% lower. The Shanghai Composite Index closed down -0.9%, while the Shenzhen Composite Index fell -1.7%.

In Europe, equity indices are trading sharply lower due to uncertainties over Sunday’s Italian referendum. In particular, financial stocks are under pressure across all regions, while energy, commodity and mining stocks has the FTSE 100 in the red.

U.S futures are set to open down -0.3%

Indices: Stoxx50 -1.1% at 2,994, FTSE -0.9% at 6,692, DAX -1.0% at 10,432, CAC 40 -1.4% at 4,499, IBEX 35 -0.8% at 8,604, FTSE MIB -0.7% at 16,987, SMI -0.8% at 7.717, S&P 500 Futures -0.3%

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