President Trump Remains Under Pressure

 | Aug 17, 2017 09:16

Originally published by AxiTrader h2 Market Summary/h2

The US dollar has been absolutely hammered overnight. In two waves of selling the dollar has lost substantial ground - against the dollar bloc in particular – after President Trump disbanded his advisory councils and then the FOMC minutes were read as extremely dovish on inflation.

That also helped reverse some of the previous day’s selloff in bonds with the 10-year Treasury falling four points to 2.23% while the 2-year dipped to 2.23%.

Stocks on the other hand were positive with small gains at the close of between 0.14% and 0.2% for the S&P 500, Nasdaq, and Dow Jones Industrial Average. That was however off the highs for the day and European bourses put in a stronger 0.7% gain in London, Paris, and Frankfurt. That’s helped SPI traders bet that we’ll build on the solid gains of the past few days with another 16 points added to yesterday afternoons close.

That would put the S&P/ASX 200 into the 5,800/5,840 resistance zone.

And speaking of resistance there wasn’t much put up by the US dollar overnight. The Aussie had already caught a bid in Asia after bouncing off a critical juncture and finding support from a very solid base metals rally in China. It is now at 0.7928, a rise of 1.38%, after US dollar weakness and the Fed minutes. The kiwi and Canadian dollar are both up more than 1% at 0.7306 and 1.2620 respectively.

On commodity markets, oil fell again despite another impressive drawdown in US crude oil inventories. It’s down 1.66%, and through important technical support, at $46.76. Gold surged on a weaker US dollar while copper – and Chinese metals – is where things kicked off yesterday. The metal with the Phd is up 2.84% to $2.96 a pound.

Today’s Australian jobs data is going to be an important event for local markets.

h2 Here's What I Picked Up (with a little more detail and a few charts)/h2 h2 International/h2
  • President Trump has dissolved two of his business advisory boards overnight as they continued to haemorrhage members as business leaders left amid a growing chorus of disquiet over his comments in the wake of the Charlottesville incident and death last weekend. The President has been directly condemned by some business and political leaders and indirectly condemned by Paul Ryan and the two former presidents Bush. He’s even copped a serve from British PM Theresa May.
  • I’ll leave your own judgements on the issue to you, personally I’m very much with Jamie Dimon and Larry Fink, but the key point for this note is the impact on markets and the Trump economic, tax, and infrastructure agenda. On this front it is worth noting the press conference at which the President suggested the moral equivalence of the two sides was actually supposed to be about infrastructure – that’s why Steve Mnuchin was standing beside President Trump in the footage of the presser. Anyway, Greg Vallliere, Horizon Investments Chief Global Strategist, wrote overnight that the President is losing corporate America, that his polls are in free fall, and he now has a tattered agenda. I couldn't agree more.
  • But the key takeaway traders took from the release of the minutes this morning at 4am Sydney time was that there is enough division among the members of the FOMC to potentially forestall another rate hike. There was also a signal in the minutes that the Fed will soon announce the tapering of the balance sheet, and that the group still has faith in the economy and labour market. But traders focussed on the inflation disquiet. That’s why bonds rallied and the US dollar took its second leg lower for the night (the first had been at the announcement of the disbanding of the president’s business advisory groups).
  • So it’s back to the Fed as the key driver of markets, the economy, and sentiment. So on that front, the release of the minutes to the last FOMC meeting couldn’t have been more timely. While it is worth noting the data has picked up since the meeting there is a clear sense of disquiet among the members of the FOMC at the lack of inflation in the US economy. Certainly, there are members who still think it will return with gusto given the tightness of the labour market.
  • And while I’m on central banks, it’s worth noting that news hit the wires last night that Mario Draghi won’t be delivering anything relating to changed ECB policy at his Jackson Hole speech this week. Interestingly though Ardo Hansson, a member of the ECB’s governing council, told an Estonian newspaper that the ECB will soon end the QE programme because of the pick up in economic growth. And you can see the message the ECB will eventually delive that rates will stay low and the balance sheet won’t be tapered because he added “After the completion of the purchase of bonds, the reinvestment of bonds already bought will continue for some time; that is, when the earlier purchased bonds expire, new ones will be bought instead”.
  • Unemployment and wages data was out in the UK last night. The data showed that unemployment fell to 4.4% which is the lowest since 1975. But wages growth is stuck in neutral with just a 2.1% print. It's the same story in so many developed markets as the Australian data showed yesterday.
h2 Australia/h2
  • The challenge for Australian economic growth at a time of very high household debt, and the headwind that poses for consumption, was writ large yesterday with another quarter showing aggregate wages growth slipping to a new record low of 1.78%. Sure it was only 0.01% lower that the weak wages growth shown in Q1 2017.
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