Ugly Sea Of Red In Global Markets As Traders Lose Faith In Trumponomics

 | Mar 22, 2017 10:28

Originally published by AxiTrader h2 Key Takeaway/h2

There is an ugly sea of red across global markets this morning – unless you’re a bond, euro and yen bull that is – as traders finally succumb to their fears that the positive benefits of Trumponomics are going to be delayed. It’s not a surprise really because as I wrote Monday this was the week for it to happen. A week when a lack of fundamental catalysts and stalled moves in the US dollar and stocks gave traders time to exercise hope or fear.

And it’s the latter they chose as the S&P 500 had it worst day of 2017 and broke its 100 day+ run without a 1% fall. A combination of the charts and a recognition that any positive economic and market stimulus is currently stalled behind the repeal of Obama care and an investigation into Russia’s attempts to influence the US election last year are turning sentiment.

Anyway, as I say stocks in the US and Europe are down and the SPI 200 is indicating a 48 point fall at the open of trade here in Australia.

On forex markets a much higher than CPI print in the UK, and a mini collapse in the US dollar shot the pound up and through resistance. That helped drag euro higher as well. The yen got the double whammy of a weaker dollar and the safe haven bid as well. But the Aussie and many EM currencies have been hit by the “risk off” tone in the overnight moves.

They’ve also been hit by falling commodity prices which sees base metals lower across the board. Oil has lost another 1.8%, copper is down roughly the same amount, and naturally gold is going the other way and has risen 0.9%.

I’ll probably write less than usual today – because, hey, things are moving the way I thought they would.

h2 What You Need To Know (with a little more detail and a few charts)/h2
  • S&P 500 -29 (1.24%) 2344 (7.33 am Sydney)
  • Dow Jones Industrial Average -237 (1.14%) 20668
  • Nasdaq 100 -108 (1.83%) 5,793
  • SPI 200 -48 (0.8%) 5,710
  • AUD/USD 0.7693 -0.45%
  • Gold $1244 +0.98%
  • WTI Oil $47.34 -1.82%
h2 International/h2
  • I’ll update my chart of the big long term trend for US stocks – but this reversal could be the start of a big move of 100 points plus lower in the S&P 500.
  • So with the stalling in the rally of stocks and no fresh catalysts to take prices higher folks start to take a little cash out of the market, bets of the table. That makes the vote Thursday on the bill to replace Obamacare a big event for the market.
  • It’s still early days yet, it is the first time since October that US stocks have fallen 1%. So I don’t want to over egg it too much. But what’s going on is the very thing I have been writing about for a couple of week’s now. Donald Trump is wasting political capital on repealing Obamacare in the same way that the 44th President wasted capital getting it in place. The impact of this is that the tax and infrastructure policy and implementation the market has been aching for looks set to be delayed.
  • So as the equity trade gets tired the Bond market is rallying with US 10's at 2.42% and 2's 1t 1.26%.
  • And it's worth noting the BAML survey of big global institutional investors records that more than 80% of respondents say US stocks are over valued. To put that in context it helps higlight that its retail money that has been feeding this rally.
  • Talking to Tom Keen and David Gura on Monday Jack Bogle from Vanguard said that while the fund flow from retail last year was around $40 billion a month it had accelerated to $64 billion a month for the first two months of 2017.
  • FOMO folks, FOMO. I'm always leery of pinging average investors for getting in and out late - but that could be what is/has happened recently.
  • Elsewhere, Macron’s performance in the French presidential debate may not have been spectacular but it was enough to get the voters – according to polls – and pundits thinking he could beat Marine Le Pen in both rounds of the election. That helped euro.
  • In the UK the inflation data last night showed at 2.3% print for headline CPI in February and a 2% print for core. They are number s that are big enough to reverse the BoE’s easing.
  • Other than that it’s really just about the price action. That’s as important as fundamentals and even though it's only one day's trade lower in stocks as I wrote recently the time for a longer term pullback is at hand.
h2 Australia/h2
  • It’s likely to be a rough start to trade on the ASX this morning. That’s both because of the offshore lead – which has knocked the SPI down 40 points now to 5718. The pressure is likely to be broad based given it’s only the defensive utility sector in the S&P 500 which is up this morning. The big losers are the financial and basic material sectors which are down 1.38% and 2.11% respectively.
  • The big banks in the US are getting absolutely hammered in the US which doesn’t bode well for the local sector this morning.
  • Naturally they are the big sectors on the ASX so they’ll weigh on trade. And that means the S&P/ASX 200 is likely to break down and out of the little wedge pattern I highlighted yesterday.
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