Stocks Hit Record Highs And OPEC Is Exercising Its Jawbone Again

 | Jun 02, 2017 10:18

Originally published by AxiTrader h2 Market Summary/h2

It was a solid night for global stock markets with the big US indexes in record territory once again.

The S&P 500 closed up a whopping 18 points, 0.75%, to 2,430 while the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.65% and the Nasdaq 100 was 0.78% higher. In Europe traders also had a cracking day with the FTSE 100 up 0.32%, the DAX up 0.4% while the CAC 40 in Paris and MIB in Milan rose 0.66% and 0.99% respectively.

That's helped the SPI rally 17 points overnight as the local ASX builds, or tries to build, on that important 5,680 low.

On forex markets the very solid ADP payrolls data , and what it suggests for tonight's US non-farm payrolls, buoyed the US dollar which is trying to base. That means the euro looks like it might be topping and that also means it's just another weight on the Australian dollar which is suffering the sellers once again. It's at 0.7374 near the lows of the last 24 hours.

On commodity markets even a big draw in inventories couldn't help crude oil prices which slipped again. That encouraged OPEC to exercise its jawbone - but to no avail. Gold is a little weaker on the back of the US dollar strength while copper and base metals, even iron ore, seem to have had a better night of it.

On the day ahead we get HIA new home sales in Australia and the big data of global data US non-farm payrolls for May with an expectation of 185,000 jobs.

h2 Here's What I Picked Up (with a little more detail and a few charts)/h2
  • S&P 500 2430 +18 (0.75%) (7.41 Sydney - change since previous day)
  • Dow 21144 +135 (0.65%)
  • Nasdaq 6,246 +48 (0.78%)
  • SPI 200 5,770 +17 (0.29%)
  • AUDUSD 0.7374 (-0.67%)
  • Gold $1265 (-0.22%)
  • WTI Oil $48.03 (-0.6%)
h2 International/h2
  • US stocks made new highs overnight on the back fo some pretty solid indications and data which suggest tonight's non-farms could be solid. ADP private payrolls printed a much stronger than expected increase of 253,000 compared to the 180,000 forecasters had predicted. This data doesn't map perfectly to tonight's non-farms but it is another indication that the US labour market is the very brightest spot in the US economy. Assuming non-farms is strong again tonight then it's likely the Fed will be emboldened with the view that jobs growth will ultimately lead to wages growth which will lead to inflation. Jobless claims rose a little to 248,000 last week while the 4-week moving average also ticked higher. But worth noting continuing claims were stronger than expected.
  • In other data ISM manufacturing in the US was stronger at 54.9 v 54.5 expected. But prices paid fell to 60.5 v66.4 expected and construction work done fell 1.4% versus the 0.5% rise the pundits had forecast.
  • But that won't stop the Fed from raising rates in a couple of weeks it seems. Last night Fed governor Jerome Powell but the resurgent debate about inflation - or lack thereof - into context for Fed hikes. "While the recent performance of the labor market might warrant a faster pace of tightening, inflation has been below target for five years and has moved up only slowly toward 2 percent, which argues for continued patience, especially if that progress slows or stalls," he told the economic club of New York. He was a busy fellow overnight and told CNBC that a total of 3 hikes, 2 more, seems appropriate this year.
  • These comments fit neatly with his colleague San Francisco Fed president John Williams who said this week maybe even three more hikes might be necessary.
  • Looking at European data now, and the EU manufacturing PMI's were on the solid side of the ledger. The Markit German manufacturing PMI printed 59.5 and the EU-wide version printed 57. In the UK the print was 56.7 while France and Italy printed 55.1 and 53.8. The latter two were a little lower than forecast but still positive reads.
  • That wasn't the case for the Chinese Caixin PMI data yesterday. The print of 49.6 for May wasn't only weaker than the expected outturn of 50.1 but it was also on the contraction side of the ledger. Which is one of the reasons why the Aussie dollar came under selling pressure again even though retail sales were solid and CapEx didn't entirely stink.
  • So president Trump has pulled the US out of the Paris climate agreement. There will be much gnashing of teeth and wringing of hands. I won't get into that. But it is worth noting that the president again defined his role narrowly as simply president of the US. He said, I'm paraphrasing, he was elected to look after the people of Pittsburg, not Paris. He also highlighted that he is still fulfilling his campaign promises. Which is where it ultimately matters for markets. president Trump's tax and infrastructure plans are currently stalled. But when you hear speeches such as he gave in the Rose Garden this morning it clear he is still going to pursue them.
  • Elon Musk has quite the president's advisory council as a result.
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