'Trump Trade' Back In Vogue?

 | Jan 25, 2017 07:45AM ET

h3 Wednesday January 25: Five things the markets are talking about

The new U.S. President is certainly providing opportunity for speculators in these choppy markets. All asset classes continue to witness strong intraday volatility, which is not expected to ease up anytime soon.

In particular, currency moves have been leading the pack this week. This year's geopolitical concerns (Brexit, Trumponomics, Dutch, French and German federal and regional elections), supported mostly by the rise of populism, are expected to dominate capital markets’ asset price moves.

Overnight, global flows to haven assets continued to reverse, with gold again under pressure, sovereign bond yields backing up to their highs of the year, while global indices catch a bid on President Trump’s plans to boost infrastructure projects. Yesterday, POTUS revived two oil pipeline projects and issued directives that aim to ease regulations on infrastructure projects and U.S. manufacturing.

Today, the President is expected to focus on immigration and “Wall” building.

h3 1. Equities – green lights across the board/h3

Global equities are carrying on the stellar work of the Dow's Tuesday move higher.

In Asia, equities were supported by investors improved risk sentiment from both regional economic data and overnight gains in the U.S.

Despite the dollar reversing some of its gains against the yen (¥113.66), the Nikkei closed out their session rising +1.4% after setting a two-month closing low in the previous session. Data overnight saw Japan’s exports rise y/y in December for the first time in 15-months.

However, gains elsewhere were notably more muted. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 rallied +0.4% on mining support. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index was up +0.3%, while Korea’s Kospi added +0.1% as that country’s economy grew faster than expected in Q4.

In China, stocks shed their early weakness after the PBoC hiked the rate on its medium-term lending facility by +10 bps (a tightening bias). The Shanghai Composite closed out up +0.2%.

In Europe too, equity indices are trading sharply higher, with bank’s leading the gains across the board on a back up of sovereign yields. Commodity and mining stocks are generally lower, but mixed in the FTSE 100.

U.S. futures are set to open in the black (+0.2%).

Indices: Stoxx50 +1.1% at 3,316, FTSE +0.2% at 7,163, DAX +1.1% at 11,726, CAC 40 +1.0% at 4,877, IBEX 35 +1.6% at 9,534, FTSE MIB +0.2% at 19,546, SMI +1.1% at 8,335, S&P 500 Futures +0.2%