U.S Budget Resolution Provides Dollar Temporary Relief

 | Oct 20, 2017 07:06AM ET

Friday October 20: five things the markets are talking about

There are three themes that are dominating current position taking.

First, political developments in Spain, second, the decision on the next Fed chair that may influence the course of U.S interest rates and third, Brexit negotiations.

Overnight, the ‘mighty’ U.S dollar has climbed against all its G10 peers after the U.S Senate adopted a budget resolution, giving some momentum to President Trump’s planned tax cuts.

Elsewhere, the EUR is underperforming as investors try to anticipate the next move in Spain’s Catalan crisis, while the yen comes under renewed pressure ahead of this weekend’s Japanese election.

Note: Japan goes to the polls on Sunday with a win tipped for PM Abe.

Gold and U.S Treasury prices are both under pressure as safe haven trading has lost some of its lustre for now with investors.

1. Stocks get the green light

In Japan, the Nikkei (+0.4%) has posted its longest winning streak since 1961 on a weaker yen and PM Abe hopes. The index rallied for the 14th consecutive session overnight. For the week, it has gained +1.4%, its sixth straight weekly gain and the longest such winning streak in a year. The broader Topix traded flat.

Down-under, Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index rose +0.2% and South Korea’s Kospi index gained +0.7%. In New Zealand, the S&P/NZX 50 Index ended little changed after losing as much as -1.2% in the previous session on the news that Labor party will form a coalition.

In Hong Kong, stock prices rebounded sharply overnight, as investors scrambled for bargains, which was triggered by the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) reference to a “Minsky moment.” the Hang Seng Index rose +1.2%, recovering much of the previous sessions -1.9% decline, and ending the week roughly flat. The Hong Kong China Enterprises Index jumped +1.8%, up +0.3% for the week.

Note: “Minsky Moment” is a sudden collapse of asset prices that follows a long period of growth, sparked by debt or currency pressures.

In China, stocks eked out modest gains overnight, but ended the week lower; amid concerns China’s economy is losing momentum after official data showed growth slowing in Q3 and property sales softening. The Shanghai Composite Index added +0.3% while the blue-chip Shanghai Shenzhen CSI 300 index fell -0.1%. For the week, CSI300 was up +0.2%, while SSEC lost -0.4%.

In Europe, regional bourses have opened higher and are maintaining that trend. The risk sentiment is supported by political developments in U.S. The outlier continues to be Spain due to Catalonia uncertainty heading into weekend.

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U.S stocks are expected to open a tad higher (+0.1%).

Indices: Stoxx50 +0.2% at 3,607, FTSE +0.1% at 7,532, DAX +0.2% at 13,020, CAC 40 +0.1% at 5,372, IBEX 35 -0.1% at 10,190, FTSE MIB +0.5% at 22,239, SMI flat at 9,237, S&P 500 Futures+0.1%