Since the murder of UK MP Cox last week, the mood in the markets shifted.
Today is the continuation what was seen in the last two sessions last
week. The difference is that participants seem more confident, as the polls
and betting odds seem to support our initial recognition of the tragedy's
potential to impact psychology.
As we noted in our review of speculative positioning in the futures
market, there was interest in buying sterling
prior to last week's reversal.
In the week ending June 14, the gross long sterling position jumped 25.4k
contracts to 61.7k. That is new buying, which is different than
short-covering. There were some
short-covering, 4.3k contracts (to 98.4k), but it amounts to 1/6 of the new
buying.
Sterling is the strongest currency today, gaining 2% against the US
dollar and 1.4% against the euro. The FTSE is posting a
sharp advance of almost 2.5% but is lagging other main European bourses and the more than 3% gain in the Dow
Jones Stoxx 600. It is interesting to note the sectors doing best in the
UK: financials (+3.6%) and information technology (3%).
Consumer staples (1.4% and materials (1.6%) are the laggards in late-morning
turnover.
UK gilts are bearing the brunt of the unwind of safe haven flows. The 10-year yield
is up seven bp to 1.21%, and the 2-year yield is up five bp to 43 bp. This is only a couple basis points more than US Treasury yields
have risen today. Peripheral benchmark 10-year bond yields
are off 8-11 bp. During period anxiety, intra-EMU spreads widen over
Germany, as anxiety eases, the spreads narrow. The introduction of
sovereign bond buying has not altered that general pattern.
Asian equities popped higher at the open, with both the MSCI Asia-Pacific
Index and the Nikkei gapping higher. The Nikkei closed 2.3% higher,
its biggest gain in almost two months. The MSCI Asia-Pacific Index gained
1.8% and was making new highs late in the session. Chinese shares
advanced, but fractionally (Shanghai Composite +0.1%), and underperformed India
(0.8%) despite news that the central bank governor who is respected by many
investors, is stepping down when his terms end
in early September.
In an otherwise light economic calendar, Japan's May trade figures stand out. Much of the headlines
focused on the unexpected deficit of JPY40.7 bln. The median of the Bloomberg survey was for a JPY70 bln
surplus. However, there are two mitigating factors.
First, the impact from the earthquake is expected to be
short-lived. The impact of the earthquake disruption may have been
seen in the 11.3% fall in exports
year-over-year, compared with April's 10.1% decline.
Second, there is a seasonal issue. Since 1993, the has only
been one year (2009) that the May trade balance was better than the April
balance. When the seasonal patterns are
adjusted for, May's trade resulted in a JPY270 bln surplus (down from a
revised JPY397 bln surplus in April).
Rising equities markets and rising core bond yields are weighing on the yen. It is the
only major currency that is not rising against the dollar today. It is
off about a third of one percent.
The dollar remains well within the range established last Thursday: ~JPY103.55-JPY106.05.
There has been a little market
reaction to the results of Italy's local elections that resulted in the anti-EU
Five-Star Movement candidates become mayors in Rome and Turin.
Italian shares are lagging behind today's equity advance, though in fairness it had outperformed in recent days. Italy's two and
10-year bonds are either keeping pace with Spain of beating it.
Spain goes to the polls this weekend in a "do-over" election
after the election last December failed
to produce a workable coalition. The recent polls suggest Rajoy's PP
will not secure a majority, and that Podemos may have been the biggest winner
over the past six months, and overtaking the Socialists as the second largest
party.
The euro was bid to $1.1380 in the Asian morning before easing in the European morning back toward $1.1330. Intraday support is seen near $1.1300. The euro has rallied from $1.1130 on June 16 to today's high. A 38.2% retracement of this move is found near $1.1285.
The US dollar is being sold through the CAD1.2820 area that provided support in recent days. The next immediate target is near CAD1.2760. The Australian and New Zealand dollars are up about 1%. today. The Australian dollar looks poised to re-challenge the $0.7500 area that capped the advance (with a key reversal on June 9). A break of cap may signal another near-term one percent advance.
Market Takes Another Step Away from the Edge, Dollar and Yen Ease
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
June 20, 2016
Rating: