Complacency Remains Despite North Korea's Miniaturised Nuclear Weapon

 | Aug 09, 2017 09:02

Originally published by AxiTrader h2 Market Summary/h2

Fire and fury. That’s what US president Donald Trump has promised North Korea early this morning after news broke last night that the Hermit Kingdom has miniaturised a nuclear weapon to the point it can be placed on one of its missiles.

It’s been enough to break the Dow Jones Industrial Average's 10 day run of gains. But there is still an amazing level of market complacency. Maybe this is the thing, the grey swan from left field, the known unknown, that roils markets over the next week.

Anyway to the price action.

The S&P 500 dipped 0.24% with falls across the board and only 169 stocks higher. It closed at 2,474. The Nasdaq was also lower, down 0.21% to 6,370 while the Dow dipped 0.15% to 22,085. Europe’s rally will fade at the open this afternoon when they play catch up to the reversal in US markets.

And maybe the 7 points SPI traders have added to the S&P/ASX 200 overnight might prove ephemeral as well. Yesterday’s price action was awful. Broad based selling and another failed break of the wedge. We’ll need to keep an eye on US futures in our day today.

On forex markets the US dollar’s recovery continued. It’s stronger pretty much across the board with only the yen – which benefits from geopolitical risk – and the Australian dollar (which has a strong NAB business survey to thank) providing any resistance. The AUD/USD is still above 79 cents at 0.7909.

On commodity markets gold hasn’t caught the bid I think it could, copper has roared higher again, and crude is a little lower.

On the docket today we get Westpac-MI consumer sentiment and Chinese inflation data in our time zone along with home loan data for Australia.

h2 Here's What I Picked Up (with a little more detail and a few charts)/h2 h2 International/h2
  • US defence officials now believe that North Korea has the capability to miniaturise a nuclear weapon and place it on one of its missiles, The Washington Post reported overnight. That has to be the most troubling thing we've heard for a long time on the geopolitical and global security front. But such is the complacency of this market of low volatility, but the dip, she'll be right mate, that no one seems to care. Sure yen traders took a little notice, and perhaps even gold did at the margin, but on the whole traders have ousted moved along, nothing to see.
  • I find this complacency troubling. That's both at a personal and market level. Game theory tells us that the game change we've seen with the diminishment of US and Russian influence since the fall of the Berlin Wall and the rise of many other players makes the globe inherently more risky insofar as a smaller player could do something stupid - like actually fire the miniaturised nuclear weapon it has in the end of its missile. Anyway, for the moment, markets don't care.
  • And I guess the good news is that China has said it will enforce the new sanctions placed on North Korea by the UN over the weekend. But unlike his father and grandfather – who had close ties to Beijing and in China – Jim Jong-un doesn’t visit and hasn’t the relationships that his predecessors had. That makes China’s influence likely less strong than in the past – except on an economic scale.
  • As we enter the period of the month with less data, and as earnings season fades, it could be that the market is finally and significantly vulnerable. This chart from Joe Ciolli’s story over at Business Insider is a cracker in showing that the market performance has been driven by a very narrow group of companies. Just look at the red line – the equally weighted S&P 500 – and we see a very different picture for US stocks. Not terminal, but at risk of rolling over further.
  • Ciolli asks, “So what does it all mean? Put quite simply: the foundation of the US stock market isn’t as strong as it looks on paper. Less publicized industries are faltering under the surface as mega-cap juggernauts continue to impose their will on the overall direction of the market”. Spot on.
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