The ambiguity of trade progress continues to be the dominant driver with all asset classes. The dollar finished lower after a round of trade talks in Washington DC did not see cataclysmic outcome after President Trump delivered a tariff hike. Global equities saw some buying, mainly because the market is pricing in some agreement being reached on the trade front along with puts from Powell, the PBOC, and Trump. Europe takes centre-stage, with the focus shifting to Germany’s first quarter GDP reading and the ZEW Survey which are expected to see a rebound and improved sentiment respectively.
USD – Trade deal progress expected
EUR – Germany GDP to rebound sharply; ZEW Survey to show improved sentiment
Oil – Supported on geopolitical risks from Iran, Venezuela and Libya
Trade
The vulnerability from trade talks saw US equities selloff strongly as fears of a prolong trade war prevented an attempt for fresh record highs. As talks reach a climax, the market appears exhausted chasing both punitive and optimistic headlines. The implementation of the tariff hike by the US did not derail high-level talks as talks appear poised to resume in Beijing. Chinese goods that left ports before May 10th are not subject to the increase, thus providing a roughly small two-week window that could provide added incentive for a deal to be finalised.
Friday’s rebound stemmed from supportive comments from Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin that talks were constructive and his counterpart Chinese Vice Premier Liu He, who noted that talks went fairly well. China is expected to announce countermeasures as we enter the final stages of negotiations.
NZD
The RBNZ sent the kiwi to a 6-month low after deciding to cut rates for the first times since November 2016. The downward trend did not continue as the central bank appeared to be one and done. Some analysts are now targeting the official cash rate to remain at the record low 1.5% through the middle of 2022. If we do see further deterioration of data another cut is possible, but that may not happen if China gets a trade deal done and the PBOC continues to deliver more stimulus.
AUD
The Australian dollar finished slightly softer as bearish bets remain in place as expectations remain high the RBA will cut rates later this year growth remains weak and inflation stays lows. The RBA rate decision surprised many Aussie dollar sellers that the central bank opted against an easing policy. The Statement of Monetary Policy (SOMP) however slashed growth, consumption and investment forecasts, highlighting that we will likely see two rate cuts.
The Australian currency also saw its correlation to trade war stories increase. While most of the week saw a risk averse theme driven by trade talks, the Australian dollar finished modestly lower. A trade deal is expected over the next several weeks, so that means we could be nearing a key bottom for some commodity currencies.
CAD
Canada’s economy is starting to show signs of life after posting a record job gain in April. The loonie has been battered over the last few months, despite a strong recovery with oil prices, its largest export. The employment report could be a game changer as broad strength was seen throughout all four provinces. The Bank of Canada may be right that the slowdown is temporary and bets for easing have come down dramatically.
Oil saw some weakness on global growth concerns, but a plethora of geopolitical risks could keep prices stable.
Gold
Gold’s safe-haven demand appears to be fluttering. With significant moves in equities and bond yields stemming from the trade war developments, recently the yellow metal has done little to impress. The base case that a trade deal will be reached is not doing gold any favours. The lack of a major move higher despite a Fed that is on hold, the PBOC is actively providing fresh accommodation and central banks continue to be buying gold is frustrating bullion bulls. It appears commodities might need to see a major rout in the dollar before rallying. Eurozone growth could be key next week, and if we start to see better data in Europe, that might help spur dollar weakness, which could help gold.
Source: marketpulse
The ambiguity of trade progress continues to be the dominant driver with all asset classes. The dollar finished lower after a round of trade talks in Washington DC did not see cataclysmic outcome after President Trump delivered a tariff hike. Global equities saw some buying, mainly because the market is pricing in some agreement being reached on the trade front along with puts from Powell, the PBOC, and Trump. Europe takes centre-stage, with the focus shifting to Germany’s first quarter GDP reading and the ZEW Survey which are expected to see a rebound and improved sentiment respectively.
USD – Trade deal progress expected
EUR – Germany GDP to rebound sharply; ZEW Survey to show improved sentiment
Oil – Supported on geopolitical risks from Iran, Venezuela and Libya
Trade
The vulnerability from trade talks saw US equities selloff strongly as fears of a prolong trade war prevented an attempt for fresh record highs. As talks reach a climax, the market appears exhausted chasing both punitive and optimistic headlines. The implementation of the tariff hike by the US did not derail high-level talks as talks appear poised to resume in Beijing. Chinese goods that left ports before May 10th are not subject to the increase, thus providing a roughly small two-week window that could provide added incentive for a deal to be finalised.
Friday’s rebound stemmed from supportive comments from Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin that talks were constructive and his counterpart Chinese Vice Premier Liu He, who noted that talks went fairly well. China is expected to announce countermeasures as we enter the final stages of negotiations.
NZD
The RBNZ sent the kiwi to a 6-month low after deciding to cut rates for the first times since November 2016. The downward trend did not continue as the central bank appeared to be one and done. Some analysts are now targeting the official cash rate to remain at the record low 1.5% through the middle of 2022. If we do see further deterioration of data another cut is possible, but that may not happen if China gets a trade deal done and the PBOC continues to deliver more stimulus.
AUD
The Australian dollar finished slightly softer as bearish bets remain in place as expectations remain high the RBA will cut rates later this year growth remains weak and inflation stays lows. The RBA rate decision surprised many Aussie dollar sellers that the central bank opted against an easing policy. The Statement of Monetary Policy (SOMP) however slashed growth, consumption and investment forecasts, highlighting that we will likely see two rate cuts.
The Australian currency also saw its correlation to trade war stories increase. While most of the week saw a risk averse theme driven by trade talks, the Australian dollar finished modestly lower. A trade deal is expected over the next several weeks, so that means we could be nearing a key bottom for some commodity currencies.
CAD
Canada’s economy is starting to show signs of life after posting a record job gain in April. The loonie has been battered over the last few months, despite a strong recovery with oil prices, its largest export. The employment report could be a game changer as broad strength was seen throughout all four provinces. The Bank of Canada may be right that the slowdown is temporary and bets for easing have come down dramatically.
Oil saw some weakness on global growth concerns, but a plethora of geopolitical risks could keep prices stable.
Gold
Gold’s safe-haven demand appears to be fluttering. With significant moves in equities and bond yields stemming from the trade war developments, recently the yellow metal has done little to impress. The base case that a trade deal will be reached is not doing gold any favours. The lack of a major move higher despite a Fed that is on hold, the PBOC is actively providing fresh accommodation and central banks continue to be buying gold is frustrating bullion bulls. It appears commodities might need to see a major rout in the dollar before rallying. Eurozone growth could be key next week, and if we start to see better data in Europe, that might help spur dollar weakness, which could help gold.
Source: marketpulse