Fed Chair Yellen Has Supported Both The US Dollar And Stocks

 | Dec 21, 2016 09:18

Originally published by AxiTrader h2 Quick Recap/h2

Not much happened but so much to talk about.

The yen is under the pump, stocks are up again, bonds aren’t selling off that aggressively, and metals recovered Asian weakness in London.

It sets up a good day for the local stock market.

h2 Here's What You Need To Know/h2 h3 International/h3
  • Lots of chat about Janet Yellen in markets overnight. Or more particularly that she was pretty upbeat about the economy and didn’t step back from the hawkishness of last week’s Fed. It’s reinforced policy divergence to forex traders and strengthened the US dollar. But it hasn’t hurt stocks because traders are focussed on the economic strength side of the equation.
  • So the S&P 500 is up 0.3% at 2269, the Dow is trying to break 20,000 and currently sits at 19973, the Nasdaq is at 5481 up 0.45% and the Russell 2000 is up 0.8%.
  • U.S. 10-Year's are at 2.56% while the 2-year rate is sitting at 1.22%.
  • China returned the US underwater drone.
  • Italy is getting ready to support its banking system even as Unicredit (MI:CRDI) sells off a swathe of its bad debts.
  • The Malaysian Ringgit is still under intense pressure. We’ll need to keep an eye on it and EM more broadly in 2017. But my sense remains some of Donald Trump’s nominal growth dividend will leak into the global economy while the US dollar is this high, or higher.
  • And while I’m on EM last night the release of retail sales in Mexico showed a solid rise of 1.6% during October. We’ll see what the Trump effect is in the last two months of 2016 when the data is released in early 2017. But this is not terrible.

Much of everything else I picked up is below

h3 Australia/h3
  • Another unexpectedly positive day as money came off the sidelines and fund managers get ready for a solid end to the quarter. The ASX closed up 29 points, 0.52%, at 5591. That was just a little below the years high yet it was also the highest close since August 2015. Once again the strength on the ASX was a lead, not a lag, for the bigger markets of Europe and the US.
  • To be clear, the correlation I highlighted yesterday that I have noticed where the ASX is a leader not a lagger in 2016 has come on unexpectedly good or bad days. Not every day. My hypothesis, as discussed with Natalie on SkyBiz on Tuesday morning is that the big global funds, many who have offices here in Australia, move first here and then the asset allocation works its way around the global markets clock.
  • Anyway looking at the day ahead the miners did okay overnight even though basic materials are again one of only 3 sectors on the S&P 500 in the red today, along with energy and industrials. So SPI traders have marked the March contract up another 10 points to 5562.
  • As we head to the end of the year – and as I’m about to have three weeks off from tomorrow it’s worth thinking about the longer term. Naturally, the S&P/ASX 200 has to break and hold above the years high to get excited. But if it does a medium term look at the SPI suggests a move toward the 5760/5810 region.
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