U.S Dollar Stumbles, But Does Not Fall

 | Nov 25, 2016 06:38AM ET

Friday November 25: Five things the markets are talking about

It seems that investors are happy to take a breather in this holiday-shortened week as the dollar pares this week’s surge supported by U.S rate differentials.

The “reflationary trade” continues to suck money back in to U.S equity markets, while putting further pressure on emerging market FX rates, bond prices and stock markets.

Expectations for stronger U.S. economic growth and higher inflation have sent stateside indexes to fresh highs this week, while U.S 10-year yields have settled at their highest level in yearly three-years (+2.38%).

Do the present U.S market fundamentals justify the recent moves or are the asset-price moves built more on hope? Currently, many of Trumps policy proposals lack detail, and it’s not very clear what support Trump will actually get from Congress.

1. Global equities a mixed performance

Asian equities advanced overnight as the U.S Thanksgiving break helped slowdown the dollar’s rally that has sucked capital out of most emerging markets.

MSCI’s broadest index of iShares MSCI Pacific ex Japan (NYSE:EPP) added +0.5%. It is set to end the week +1.7% higher, its biggest weekly gain in two-months, but remains down -3% from just before Trump’s election victory.

The Nikkei, which earlier hit its highest level in 11-months, closed +0.26% higher as the dollar pared its gains. That’s a weekly gain of +2%, and is up almost +6.9% since before the U.S. election.

In Europe, equity indices are trading mixed with banking and healthcare stocks weighing on the Euro Stoxx 600. Commodity and mining stocks are trading mixed and providing pressure to the FTSE 100.

U.S futures are set to open up +0.2% higher.

Indices: Stoxx50 +0.2% at 3,045, FTSE -0.1% at 6,826, DAX flat at 10,689, CAC 40 flat at 4,543, IBEX 35 -0.1% at 8,646, FTSE MIB +0.1% at 16,513, SMI +1.1% at 7,881, S&P 500 Futures +0.2%