It's A Big Week For Donald Trump - And For Markets

 | Jan 16, 2017 11:05

Originally published by AxiTrader h2 Quick Recap/h2

It's my first day back on deck for 2017 – so I hope 2017 is kicking off as well as you hoped and the time with family and friends over the past few weeks has been fun and rewarding. I know it has been for me.

To the markets. And it’s a huge week ahead with the inauguration of Donald Trump as the 45th president of the United States, Teresa May’s Brexit speech, Chinese President Xi heading to Davos as the first leader of the world’s second biggest economy to do so, and inflation data in the UK, US, Canada, and Europe.

We also have Earnings Season in the US ramping up as well as ECB and BoCanada decisions. And of course the Chinese data dump of retail sales, urban investment, industrial production, and GDP on Friday to round out the week.

It’s going to be huge. But first traders need to navigate the next 36 hours without the US which are off for Martin Luther King Day.

h2 What you Need To Know/h2 h3 International/h3
  • Is the Trump rally going to end this week with the inauguration on the 20th? That’s the reasonable question many are asking. The reason its reasonable is that it’s the day words can actually start to become action. And while the S&P 500, and other markets, are still doing stonkingly well there is some caution about the potential negatives of a Trump presidency – especially on the geopolitical stage.
  • That’s certainly something that was obvious in putative Secretary of State Tillerson’s Q&A session with congress last week during his confirmation hearing. Tillerson’s thought that China should be cut off from the islands it has created in the South China Sea when combined with Donald Trump’s WSJ interview over the weekend saying everything is negotiable with China – including the one-China policy it seems – puts the new administration on a collision course with China in the year that the current leadership of the President Xi and Premier Li hits the half way mark of their term appears to leave little room for negotiation. On the other hand the new administration appears to be aggressively cooperative with the Russians. That leaves plenty of room for geopolitical volatility in the year ahead. And lets face it – politics is the new black for markets.
  • But I’d argue that the Trumponomics rally – and reflation in markets across the globe more broadly - is as much about timing and the global economy as it is about the 45th US president. This chart of the Citibank G10 economic surprise index – a measure of whether data is beating or undershooting expectations – means there has had to be some recalibration of expectations about the economic outlook. As the chart below shows the positive economics surprises are at their highest level since 2010 – THAT’S THE STORY OF THE LAST 2 MONTHS. Here’s the chart
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