Strong US Data Drives Stocks And Bond Rates Higher

 | Feb 16, 2017 10:34

Originally published by AxiTrader h2 Key Takeaway/h2

No need for stocks to fear bond rates rising when it’s all on the back of stronger data. That’s what we saw again last night with solid CPI and retail sales data again highlighting that the US economy is in fairly healthy shape.

So it’s more records for US stocks, a bond market breakout, but the US dollar couldn’t capitalise on these moves.

That helped the Aussie dollar hit 77 cents and lifted a weight off gold which is back above $1230 this morning.

h2 What You Need To Know/h2
  • S&P 500 +12 (0.5%) 2349 (8.30 am Sydney)
  • Dow +107 (0.5%) 20,611
  • Nasdaq 100 +37 (0.7%) 5819
  • SPI 200 -3 (0.1%) 5756
  • AUDUSD 0.7713 0.7%
  • Gold $1233 +0.4%
  • WTI Oil $53.01 -0.36%
h2 International/h2
  • It’s been another good day for stocks across the globe with the Dow, Nasdaq and S&P making new records overnight. The FTSE, CAC, and DAX are all up as well. The key is the data and president Trump’s recommitment to the release of the tax plan everyone is waiting for.
  • So at the end of the day US stocks have posted another record close.
  • US data was stronger again last night with the January CPI doubling expectations with a print of 0.6% for the month. One month! That saw the YoY rate accelerate to 2.5%. Prices ex-food and energy printed a 2.3% YoY rate. That’s enough on its own to increase the odds of a Fed tightening in March. But throw in strong US retail sales for January - +0.4% with ex-auto’s up +0.8% - and the big leap in New York Empire State manufacturing index – which rose to 18.7 from 6.5 in January – and the momentum for a March rate hike has risen.
  • So, Bonds are higher after the strong US data and Janet Yellen’s testimony. As a result the US 10 year treasury has broken up and out of the recent consolidation. That has also taken the Australian 10 year rate up and out of its own consolidation phase also. As I highlighted in my piece on US 10’s yesterday – which I called the most important chart in the world – this break is an important one. It biases rates at least to the recent high at 2.6% and 2.80% respectively for US and Australian 10’s. But it also suggests a recommencement of the upward drift in rates after this recent consolidation. 3% in Australia and 2.8% in the US seem to be in the frame now.
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