Originally published by IG Markets
The headlines overnight have predominantly centred on Donald Trump’s budget and infrastructure plans, although not to be left out of the mix there is talk Theresa May could signal an agreement around Northern Ireland and the customs border this week.
Certainly, the economic forecasts disclosed as part of the Trump budget have been a talking point, where we won’t actually see a balanced budget for 10 years. The assumptions used to calculate the headline budget deficit of $873 billion in 2018 (revised higher from $440 billion) and $984 billion ($526 billion) are also a point of conjecture given they assume the 10-year Treasury yield will average 2.6% in 2018 and 3.1% in 2019, while US CPI should average 2.1% and 2% in those years respectively. The fact the 10-year Treasury sits unchanged on the day at 2.85% shows a market that is unnerved by these numbers, specifically as we had largely known them anyhow and one questions if the plan here actually eventuates as proposed.
That said, the deficit is only going to be headwind for the US bond market and promote upside in long-end yields. It is a growing concern and on current projections clearly something has to change, especially if the future costs to roll the maturing debt over is becoming ever more costly. It is a worry for the US dollar too in the years ahead and while FX traders are not selling US dollars on deficit concerns today, it will be an ever-growing headwind in the years ahead.
The recent driver of US dollars is seemingly the yield curve, where we saw the difference between 10-year and 2-year Treasury’s widen seven basis points last week and it’s not surprising that the US Dollar Index rallied 1.4%, helped by a touch of positioning adjustment given speculative holdings of euro longs fell 5% (to 140,823 contracts) last week. Today we see the US Dollar Index tracking 0.3% lower, with small gains seen in the Norwegian Krone (+0.5%) and Australian dollar (+0.4%), helped by strength in commodity markets, with pushing up 1.8%, although Brent and WTI have closed flat, giving up earlier gains.
There has been no real economic data to drive, although there has been some interest in the New York Federal Reserve’s January Survey of Consumer Expectations, where median inflation expectations moved 0.1% lower for both the one- and three-year horizon. The market is still assessing potential portfolio risks around this week’s US CPI print and retail sales (both are due on Thursday at 00:30AEDT), while further out we get January FOMC minutes (22 February at 06:00 AEDT) and Jay Powell’s Congressional Testimony (28 February to 1 March).
Staying on the economic data theme and locally today NAB business conditions and confidence are released at 11:30 AEDT, although the report is unlikely to spur too much life in the Aussie dollar or the interest rate markets, with 15.5bp (or 62% chance of a hike) priced into the December Aussie 30-day bill futures. The lift in sentiment won’t disappoint the bulls either, especially those holding exposures to emerging markets and specifically, I am keen to see if it is time to look at the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets (NYSE:EEM) ETF more favourable again for a short-term long position.
We can also see traders have partially closed out of longs in Volatility Index futures, after last week’s monster re-positioning, from what was a sizeable net short position of 59,357 contracts (in VIX futures) to sit at a record net long position of 85,818 – we live in interesting times. Either way, we have seen some volatility (vol) sellers, with the VIX futures curve flattening out, although it is still elevated. We have also seen high yield corporate credit working with spreads four basis points tighter, which will please equity investors after last week’s blow out, with spreads widening some 40bp through the week. US equities have also found solid buyers here and whether it’s a dead cat bounce or the start of a more promising rally is obviously yet to be seen, but we currently see the S&P 500 +1.5% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average +1.9%, while small caps are underperforming a touch with the Russell 2000 (AX:IRU) +1.2%.
Much ink has now been spilled on the fact the S&P 500 rallied so strongly (on two occasions) off the 200-day moving average and we have finally seen the US index moving back above its 5-day average printing what should be the first closing higher high since 26 January, but there is still work to do and specifically the 50% retracement if the recent correction seen at 2704 is a level the bulls will want to see the index close above. Sellers seen into here could be quite telling. However, for today we can see really strong moves higher in energy, materials, tech and financials and that bodes well for equity appreciation in Asia.
One small consideration locally is that S&P 500 futures were finding buyers through Asia yesterday, so when the S&P/ASX 200 closed at 16:10 AEDT, S&P 500 futures were already +0.6%. So some of the moves were partially priced in and if we look at S&P 500, if we want to be pedantic, we can look at the change in S&P 500 futures from 16:10 AEDT to the current time and see the index up a further 1.0%, therefore, we still see a stronger open locally, and this is true of Aussie SPI futures which are sitting up 22 points from 16:10 AEDT, so this should support the ASX 200 for a gain of 0.4% on the open this morning. Based purely on their respective ADRs (American Depository Receipts) BHP Billiton (AX:BHP) should open +0.9% higher, while Commonwealth Bank Of Australia (AX:CBA) should lift by some 0.3%.
A big day of the reporting calendar with Cochlear (AX:COH) and Transurban Group (AX:TCL) getting the lion’s share of trader’s attention. It comes at a time when the market internals are showing an ever increasingly pessimistic stance, with just 8% of the ASX 200 trading above their 20-day moving average and 51% above their longer-term 200-day average. This will be a focus this morning with the 200-day moving average on the ASX 200 sitting at 5845. We can also see over a quarter of the market closing at 4-week lows.