Stocks, The US Dollar And Bonds All Drifted Lower Overnight

 | Oct 18, 2016 11:22

Originally published by AxiTrader h2 Quick Recap/h2

No need to over egg it today. Markets just seemed to drift a little overnight and reverse some of last week's selling in US bonds and buying in the US dollar. The Aussie remains firm even though stocks across the globe were lower again.

Oil is a little weaker, gold a little stronger as traders await plenty of data, events, and catalysts as the week progresses.

h2 What You Need To Know/h2 h3 International/h3
  • An interesting 24 hours where stocks continued to slide in non-Japan Asia, Europe and the US. It would be easy to say it was the residual impact of Janet Yellen’s speech on Friday but the fact that US 10’s rallied a few points back to 1.76% means that this is really about stocks themselves. What’s really interesting over the past two sessions is that stocks are off even though the balance of the earnings reports have been well and truly in the positive column.
  • Speaking of earnings in the US Bank of America Corporation (NYSE:BAC) beat with a 41 cent EPS print against 34 cents expected. That continued the good results from the US banking sector but it didn’t stop financials, and the majority of S&P 500 sectors trading in the red. The worst performer was energy as crude pulls back from recent highs and traders wait to see the ink on the deal. Equally though both consumer cyclicals and non-cyclicals were lower. Charles Schwab (NYSE:SCHW) and Hasbro (NASDAQ:HAS) (Transformers J) also beat. On the negative side of the ledger so far overnight JB Hunt Transport and Rogers Communications missed.
  • Back to the Fed now and Fed vice-chair Stan Fischer said overnight “we are very close to our targets” of full employment and 2-percent inflation. He added that low rates make the economy more vulnerable to adverse shocks but tempered that by saying there is no current threat to financial stability. But he again kept to the recent party line we’ve been hearing from the Fed that raising rates “is not that simple” given aging populations, weak demand, and low investment may have dragged down the globes potential growth rate. That sounds like a recipe for the experiment to run the economy hot and see what happens.
  • On the data front overnight in the US industrial production rose 0.1% after the 0.5% fall the previous month against market forecasts of 0.1%. The New York Empire Manufacturing index fell to -6.8 this month from -1 .99 in September which was both a poor outcome and much weaker than market expectations of a print of -1.
  • In Europe inflation data showed EU inflation rose 0.4% month on month and year on year still too low for ECB comfort but back at 2 year highs.

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