Volatility Compressed, Yield Curves Flatten, Dollar Hangs In

 | Sep 23, 2016 07:35AM ET

Friday September 23: Five things the markets are talking about

It’s no surprise to see volatility compressed for a second day and sovereign yield curve flatten as markets and investors process this week’s central banks (FOMC and BoJ) ripple and settle on a coin toss for a December Fed hike.

With the Fed on the fence, much of the markets focus will begin to quickly shift to the U.S presidential race and how each candidate will impact markets.

Up to this point, the various asset classes have not really being weighing in on the election outcome. Expect that needle to be moved soon, now that Presidential debates are upon us (Sept 26, Oct 9 and 19).

1. Equity markets see mixed results

Asian stocks were mixed overnight, with some indices boosted by central banks’ deciding to stick with easy-money policies. However, Japanese stocks continue to trade under pressure, weighed down by a stronger yen.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 closed up +1.1%, making its gain for the week +2.5%. South Korea’s KOSPI rose +0.2%, while Singapore’s Straits Times Index was flat. Tokyo’s Nikkei Stock Average fell -0.3%, after the yen strengthened yesterday (With Japanese holidays, various asset classes were playing catch up) and is up +1.4% for the week.

In Europe, most bourses are trading lower as equity markets pare back some aggressive buying on loose monetary policy decisions. Both banking and financial stocks sectors are leading the losses.

Futures on the S&P 500 Index contracts are little changed, trading atop of their two-week high print in yesterday’s session.

Indices: Stoxx50 -0.5% at 3,034, FTSE -0.3% at 6,893, DAX -0.3% at 10,644, CAC-40 -0.7% at 4,479, IBEX 35 -1.4% at 8,813, FTSE MIB -0.9% at 16,493, SMI -0.7% at 8,252, S&P 500 Futures -0.1%