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Dollar Softer Ahead Of G7 Summit

Published 06/07/2018, 06:20 AM
Updated 03/05/2019, 07:15 AM

Thursday June 7: Five things the markets are talking about

G6 + 1

Despite global equities extending gains overnight on growing investor confidence in global growth, the markets attentions is turning towards the G7 conference that begins tomorrow in Quebec, Canada.

Expect this summit to be an intensive affair amidst heightened trade tensions between the US and some of its closest allies now that they indicated that they would retaliate against President’s Trump’s decision to impose duties on steel and aluminum imports from the EU, Canada, and Mexico.

Nevertheless, risk continues to dominate proceedings for now. The EUR remains well supported, advancing for a fourth consecutive session amid talk of an end to the ECB quantitative easing program.

US Treasury yields are holding below the psychological barrier of +3%, and US technology shares, drivers of previous rallies, notch up further records.

Elsewhere, crude oil has pared some of yesterday’s losses after US inventory reports reported a surprise increase in domestic crude stockpiles.

1. Global equities see the light

In Japan, the Nikkei share average rose to a two-week high overnight to stay above a key technical level as it tracked yesterday’s Wall Street gains. The Nikkei gained +0.8%, while the broader Topix advanced +0.6%.

Down-under, Aussie shares also edged higher overnight, led by material stocks and banks. But the gains were capped by Australia’s biggest wealth manager AMP closing at its worst level in more than nine years on the back of a fourth class action lawsuit. The S&P/ASX 200 index advanced +0.5%. In S. Korea, the KOSPI edged +0.6% higher.

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In Hong Kong, stocks have rallied on Thursday encouraged by signs of progress in the Sino-US. trade talks, easing fears of a trade war. The Hang Seng index rose +0.8%, while the Hang Seng China Enterprise (CEI) gained +1.0%.

In China, stocks slipped as investors booked profits on consumer and healthcare firms after recent gains. The blue-chip Shanghai Shenzhen CSI 300 index closed -0.2% down, while the Shanghai Composite Index also lost -0.2%.

In Europe, regional bourses trade higher, following on from Wall Street’s lead yesterday. The FTSE has faded a tad after an earlier technical glitch meant a delayed opening.

US stocks are set to open in the ‘black’ (+0.1%).

Indices: STOXX 600 +0.3% at 388.0, FTSE 100 flat at 7710, DAX +0.2% at 12860, CAC 40 +0.4% at 5481, IBEX 35 +0.9% at 9879, FTSE MIB +0.4% at 21890, SMI +0.5% at 8595, S&P 500 Futures +0.1%

WTI Crude for June 7, 2018

2. Oil prices rise on Venezuelan supply troubles, gold higher

Oil prices are a tad firmer on the back of plunging exports by OPEC-member Venezuela, although another surge in US production still caps advances.

Brent crude futures are up +51c, or +0.7%, to +$75.87 a barrel. US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude is up +30c, or +0.5%, at +$65.03 a barrel. It ended yesterday’s session -1.2% lower at +$64.73 a barrel.

OPEC member Venezuela continues to struggle to meet its supply obligations, with dozens of tankers waiting to take on its oil. The backlog is so severe that state-owned PDVSA has told some customers it may declare force majeure, allowing it to temporarily halt contracts, if they do not accept new delivery terms.

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Note: OPEC and Russia are due to meet in Vienna on June 22 to discuss production policy. Iraq said on Wednesday that a production increase was not on the table as the market was stable and prices good.

Capping global prices is US production. EIA data this week showed that US production hit another record last week at +10.8m bpd. That’s a +28% gain in two years.

Note: Surging US production has helped widen WTI’s discount to Brent to more than +$10 per barrel.

Ahead of the US open, gold prices have rallied a tad higher on the back of a weaker US dollar as the market seeks directional cues from this week-ends G7 summit and next weeks key central banks and the US/North Korea summit. Spot gold is up +0.1% at +$1,297.46 per ounce, while US gold futures for August delivery is unchanged at +$1,301.50 per ounce.

Gold for June 7, 2018

3. US Treasury prices follow Euro debt lower

US government bonds prices continue to weaken, but still trade below the psychological +3% handle, as a fresh wave of selling has hit European debt.

The yield on the US 10-year note is at +2.982%, compared with +2.917% earlier in the week.

This week, euro yields have drifted higher, under pressure after comments from an ECB official on Wednesday, which the market has interpreted as being ‘hawkish.’

Investors should expect bond movement to pick up more next week as the US Treasury Department will be holding a series of auctions, including sales of 10- and 30-year debt, and the Fed will conclude its next monetary policy meeting.

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In Canada, yesterday’s strong April trade report is consistent with expectations that the BoC could move its key interest rate higher at its next policy announcement in July. Yesterday’s data showed that Canada’s exports rose to their highest level on record and imports fell, resulting in a smaller overall trade deficit than expected.

Note: The positive numbers come during a time of heightened trade uncertainty, after the US imposed tariffs on steel and aluminum from Canada and amid signs that NAFTA talks have stalled.

USD/CAD for June 7, 2018

4. Dollar softer ahead of G7

The USD is a tad softer against the major pairs, with heightened trade tension ahead of tomorrow’s two-day G7 summit in Canada. Market consensus seems to believe that there is no chance that the US and other G7 members could reach common ground. Expect it to be an intensive affair.

EUR/USD (€1.1821) continues to find traction to move higher as the market unwinds a number of ‘bearish’ ECB bets. The consensus believes that the ECB will likely discuss QE quantitative easing at next week’s meeting (June 14) and could hint when investors should expect its end.

The USD/JPY (¥109.91) has moved back below the psychological ¥110 level with dealers citing some uncertainty on trade issues ahead of the G7 leader summit.

Note: Techies believe that the pair has failed to overcome its 200 DMA and the 61.8% retracement level of its previous decline and could pave the way for a test lower towards ¥108.

EUR/USD for June 7, 2018

5. German industrial orders slump

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Data this morning from Europe showed that German manufacturing orders dropped sharply in April, which suggests that their economic slowdown is stretching into Q2.

Demand for manufacturing goods fell for the fourth consecutive month, with total orders down -2.5% compared with March. The market was expecting a +0.6% gain.

Dipping data would suggest that rising trade tensions could be discouraging companies from new investments.

Note: Germany’s economy has started to cool, with the country’s annualized growth rate slowing to +1.2% in Q1 from +2.5% in the Q4, 2017.

Digging deeper, Germany’s Economic ministry noted that demand for aircraft, railway vehicles and vessels was particularly weak, as orders in this volatile category slumped -35.9% from the month before. Domestic orders for German manufacturing goods fell -4.8% m/m, while orders from the rest of the eurozone dropped almost -10%.

Demand from customers outside the eurozone remained strong, however, as orders increased +5.4% and that the order backlog was still “very high” in April y/y.

Forex heatmap

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