U.S. Dollar Bulls Require A Wider Yield Spread

 | Jan 29, 2018 06:35AM ET

Monday January 29: Five things the markets are talking about

US Treasurys have extended their selloff, pushing yields to its highest in three-years as capital markets prepare itself for a busy week of data releases and monetary policy announcements.

Note: Higher sovereign yields have given the mighty US US dollar a temporary lift from its multi-year lows against G20 currency pairs print from last week. Is this sustainable? Not if other sovereign yields back up at the same rate. US dollar bulls require a wider spread.

Investors can expect the FX market most likely to continue to lean on the US dollar until they elicit another response from US Treasury Secretary Mnuchin that suggests “he cares” – because US economic data alone will find it rather difficult to turn the tide of the current general dollar weakness.

On Wednesday (Jan 31), Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) gathers for Chair Janet Yellen’s final meeting on interest rates before her term ends.

This is also jobs week in the US and on Friday (Feb 2) US employers are expected to have added more jobs in January than a month earlier. Government data is also expected to show the jobless rate held steady atop of its two-decade low, and the pace of wage growth picked up from a year earlier.

In China, estimates of Chinese manufacturing and services industries are due Wednesday (Jan 31), while in Europe, growth and inflation are on display this week. On Tuesday (Jan 30), data is expected to show the euro economy with a solid expansion, while on Wednesday (Jan 31), the core euro-zone inflation report may show an uptick from a year ago.

Elsewhere, the sixth round of NAFTA talks conclude in Montreal.

On Tuesday evening (9:00 pm EDT), President Trump delivers his first State of the Union address – he is expected to build momentum for legislation on infrastructure and immigration.

1. Global stocks rally pauses

US indices finished last week on yet another positive note pressing new highs.

In Japan, the Nikkei ended flat in choppy trade overnight, with gains in cyclicals (computer chips) offset by weakness in shares sensitive to domestic demand, notably railroads and construction companies. The broader Topix produced a small gain (+0.1%).

Down-under, Aussie shares rose +0.4% on Monday, led by financials, taking a cue from Wall Street, while in S. Korea, the KOSPI 200 hit another record high, climbing +0.91%.

In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng Index fell overnight, ending a seven-day winning streak, as the market took a breather after repeatedly hitting record highs. At close of trade, the Hang Seng Index was down -0.56%, while the Hang Seng China Enterprise (CEI) fell -0.47%.

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In China, stocks tumbled on Monday, with the FTSE China Blue Chip Value 100 posting its worst day in more than two months, led by a slump in consumer and healthcare firms as investors booked profits after a recent strong rally. The Shanghai Composite index was down -0.97%, while the blue-chip index was down -1.81%.

In Europe, regional indices trade mostly lower, tracking the declines in US futures after their record closes stateside Friday.

US stocks are set to open in the black (-0.3%).

Indices: STOXX 600 – 0.2% at 399.8, FTSE flat at 7669, DAX -0.4% at 13287, CAC 40 -0.2% at 5521, IBEX 35 -0.5 at 10544, FTSE MIB -0.2% at 23820, SMI -0.2% at 9497, S&P 500 Futures -0.3%