Euro Lower As Mario Draghi Was A Little Dovish

 | Apr 28, 2017 10:52

Originally published by AxiTrader h2 Market Summary/h2

European stocks were lower and US stock traders continue to be nonplussed about the Trump team's tax plan with the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average either side of flat and the Nasdaq 100 up about 0.4%.

But the ECB, oil, and NAFTA are the big stories overnight.

Mario Draghi and his colleagues left rates on hold as expected and he, and they, did note the improvement in the EU economy. But that improved outlook was more than offset by Draghi's concerns about the outlook for inflation which has left the Euro lower and the market read on the ECB as having been more dovish than expected.

And while expectations are still for a possible change in ECB rhetoric next month the moves and outlook for oil may restrain him if inflation still looks “transitory” as the ECB has said in the past.

Last night oil fell heavily again before bouncing as traders grapple with the competing messages of the OPEC Secretary General effectively said the production cut will be extended meeting the reality of the restart of a big Libyan oil field and the continued expansion of US shale oil. WTI is this morning down 0.79% at $49.23.

On NAFTA we heard in our time zone yesterday that president Trump was not going to withdraw from NAFTA after all. But he told reporters overnight he'd intended to but took calls from the Mexican president and Canadian prime minister who he likes. So they are going to renegotiate.

On Forex markets the dovish ECB has the euro (1.0869) a little lower this morning. The yen (USD/JPY 111.21) remains pressured and the Aussie dollar (0.7470) afternoon rally yesterday faded again overnight and it remains pressured. The CAD and Mexican peso recovered in the NAFTA news, sterling (1.2907) is stronger again and the Swedish krona was poll axed by its central bank.

Watch out for the RBA to try to do the same next week.

Gold is down a few dollars, copper and base metals are off and the selling of Australia's miners yesterday accelerated in London last night.

But on balance, SPI Traders aren't fussed with prices down 4 points this morning. But the stellar results from Alphabet Inc (NASDAQ:GOOGL) and Amazon.com Inc (NASDAQ:AMZN) may help the tone in Asia today.

Tonight's US GDP release is going to be huge.

h2 What You Need To Know (with a little more detail and a few charts)/h2
  • S&P 500 +1 (0.05%) 2389 (7.17 Sydney - change since previous day)
  • Dow +6 (0.03%) 20981
  • Nasdaq +24 (0.37%) 6,048
  • SPI 200 +4 (0.07%) 5,905
  • AUD/USD 0.7463 -0.14%
  • Gold $1264 -0.4%
  • WTI Oil $49.24 0.0%
h2 International/h2
  • Mario Draghi and his governing council acknowledged the recovery in the EU last night but very much like the Fed did a few years back when talking about the US economy Draghi and his colleagues emphasised that the inflation outlook remains subdued. This is important because while I believe we will see considerably changed rhetoric from the ECB in the months ahead it doesn’t mean they will rush to act on rates.
  • Draghi said – “Incoming data since our meeting in March confirm that the cyclical recovery of the euro area economy is becoming increasingly solid and that downside risks have further diminished." But he added "at the same time, underlying inflation pressures continue to remain subdued and have yet to show a convincing upwards trend."
  • We need to think of the ECB as where the Fed was back in late 2014 and 2015. Cautiously optimistic but reluctant to derail a nascent recovery until it is established. So we’ll see more cautious language even if the German state CPI data will be making the Bundesbank and its leaders Jens Weidmann titchy.
  • The art of the deal? Is that what the trump team was doing yesterday backgrounding journos that NAFTA was about to be scotched by the president? I have no way of knowing, and president Trump said he took calls from his Canadian and Mexican counterparts. But he did tweet – of course – that if he can’t get a fair deal the US is out.
Get The App
Join the millions of people who stay on top of global financial markets with Investing.com.
Download Now