U.S. Dollar Shackled To Trump's Trade And Twitter Rants

 | Jan 26, 2018 06:46AM ET

Friday January 26: Five things the markets are talking about

President Trump’s self-proclaimed ‘gift of gab’ temporarily gave aid to the struggling US dollar Thursday, just a day after his Treasury Secretary endorsed a "weak dollar."

His Davos “strong dollar” comments managed to temporarily jolt capital markets' reserve currency of choice out of a three-day tailspin.

The forex market has been jarred first by US Treasury Secretary Mnuchin’s unusual favoring Wednesday of a weaker greenback that’s good for trade and also by ECB President Draghi's comments post-ECB’s rate announcement Thursday, that the eurozone’s regional growth justified gains in the common currency.

Elsewhere, stocks are little changed after erasing earlier gains as investors assess the impact of the greenback’s gyrations. Corporate results had set the tone on most regional bourses.

Note: The dollar’s decline in recent months has partially been driven by brightening prospects for growth outside the US, which have bolstered investors’ expectations for ‘tighter’ monetary policy elsewhere.

With President Trump expected to deliver a keynote closing speech at Davos’ World Economic Forum later this morning, investors should be expecting further dollar volatility.

Note: President Trump is expected to address the Worlds Economic Forum at 8 am EDT.

1. Stocks under pressure from currency strength

In Japan, the Nikkei has closed out the week lower in choppy trade on Friday as investors locked in profits ahead of the weekend, while mining shares and financial firms underperformed the market. The Nikkei closed -0.2% down, wile the broader Topix slid -0.3%. For the week, the Nikkei declined 0.7 percent.

Note: Australia was closed for a bank holiday.

In Hong, the Hang Seng ended the week at a record high, capping its seventh consecutive week of gains, amid optimism toward global economic recovery and accelerated money inflows from China. At close of trade, the Hang Seng index was up +1.53%, while the Hang Seng China Enterprise (CEI) rose +2.51%.

In China, equities closed out at a high, but are off their two-year highs with the Shanghai up for the sixth-week in a row, supported by gains in real estate and transport firms. The Shanghai Composite index was up +0.3%, while the blue-chip Shanghai Shenzhen CSI 300 index was up +0.39%.

In Europe, regional indices trade higher across the board, rebounding from yesterday’s losses as positive earnings in Europe and the US has helped lift markets.

US stocks are set to open in the ‘black’ (+0.2%).

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Indices: STOXX 600 +0.5% at 400.4, FTSE +0.4% at 7642, DAX +0.2% at 13322, CAC 40 +0.9% at 5531, IBEX 35 flat at 10595, FTSE MIB +0.3% at 23787, SMI +0.7% at 9551, S&P 500 Futures +0.2%