Will Yellen Douse The Rate Flame?

 | Mar 03, 2017 06:42AM ET

h3 Friday March 3: five things the markets are talking about

U.S economic data continues to be bullish and above expectations, coupled with the most recent comments from Fed officials this week are supporting growing expectations of a rate hike in a fortnight by the Fed.

Expect Fed Chair Yellen’s speech today (01:00 pm EST) to be highly scrutinized. Her remarks are likely to further shape market expectation toward a rate increase. Should Yellen signal to wait a bit longer to act, in other words, deflate expectations on an imminent increase then this Friday afternoon of trading will be rather frantic.

The macro backdrop supports the Fed’s plan of a moderate increase in its short-term interest rates – the U.S labor market nears full employment and inflation readings are either above the Fed’s 2% target or near it – however, in the past, the Fed has been a fickle bunch usually looking for the ‘sure’ bet.

The danger the Fed faces currently is that too much jawboning and no action will crush the Fed’s credibility and their tool of rhetoric used to prep the market will have dealers/investors take less notice.

For the dove, they have been able to find some cover with the Atlanta Fed lowering its GDPNow forecast yesterday to +1.8% amid slower consumer spending growth, but is it enough?

1. Mixed reaction from global stocks

Concerns over valuations, building expectations of March Fed hike, and political controversy in the White House are being attributed for the decline in global stocks.

In Japan, equities fell as investors took profits before the weekend, after hitting a 14-month high Thursday. The Nikkei dropped -0.5% on the back of a stronger yen (¥114.10). The index rose +1% on the week. The broader Topix dropped -0.4%.

In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng closed at a one month low, down -0.7%. For the week the index is down -1.7%. In China, stocks also fell and snapped a three-week winning streak. The blue-chip Shanghai Shenzhen CSI 300 index fell -0.2% on the day and -1.3% on the week. Aside from some underwhelming China services data (see below) investors are also worried about potential China regulatory reforms.

In Europe, equity indices are trading lower as market participants look to realize some weekly profits. Banking stocks are trading mixed in the Eurostoxx while commodity and mining stocks are weighing on the FTSE 100.

U.S equities are set to open in the red (-0.3%).

Indices: Stoxx50 -0.3% at 3,375, FTSE -0.3% at 7,358, DAX -0.5% at 11,998, CAC 40 -0.2% at 4,953, IBEX 35 -0.3% at 9,691, FTSE MIB -0.1% at 19,423, SMI -0.2% at 8,645, S&P 500 Futures -0.3%