×
New

Eyes on central bankers as they gather at Sintra

Unsplash.com

By
linkedin-icon google-plus-icon
Eyes on central bankers as they gather at Sintra.

Headlines

* IMF warns central banks of “uncomfortable truth” in inflation fight

* Nasdaq falls over 1% to start final week of first half as tech struggles

* Gold slumps as rate hikes push real yields higher

* Dollar bounce stalls ahead of US durable goods and housing data

FX: USD traded in a narrow range between 102.61 and 102.86. The 50-day SMA is very close by at 102.70. The 2-year yield printed a narrow “inside day”. It is losing some ground this morning dropping just below 4.70%. The 10-year yield dropped below the 200-day SMA at 3.69% but closed back above it.

EUR traded in a very tight range around 1.09 and printed a “doji” candle. There was some chatter about another ECB rate hike in September. GBP had similar price action around 1.27. The latest Reuters poll showed high expectations for more rate hikes at the next two meetings at least. USD/JPY closed marginally in the green at 143.50. Finance Ministry's Kanda was on the wires in the early Asian hours yesterday with verbal intervention to support the yen.  AUD finished the day little changed at 0.6675. The 200-day SMA at 0.6690 offered some support. The Aussie has pushed higher today on CNH strength post-fix as China’s state banks stepped in to support the yuan. USD/CAD has dropped to a fresh cycle low at 1.3119 this morning.

Stocks: US equities extended losses from Friday. The benchmark S&P 500 lost 0.45% and the Nasdaq 100 finished lower by 1.36%. But the Dow closed down 0.04%. The tech sector underperformed with big losses in Meta, Nvidia and Alphabet. Tesla fell more than 6% after cautious commentary from Goldman Sachs. Interestingly, small caps were resilient. The Russell 2000 closed in the green amid gains in the regional banking sector.

Asian stocks were mostly positive. The Nikkei 225 was lower in a further drop from the 33k level. Yen's weakness is a key concern for authorities who may be forced to intervene soon. The Hang Seng was better bid with gains in tech and property.

US equity futures are pointing to a better open. European equity futures point to a modestly higher open (+0.3%). The Euro Stoxx 50 closed up 0.2% yesterday.

Gold eked out small gains after Friday’s cycle low at $1910. There were mild tailwinds across the commodity space from the softer greenback.

Day Ahead – Sintra in focus

This week brings the ECB forum which takes place at Sintra in Portugal. Several ECB speakers are slated to appear today including President Lagarde and arch hawk Schnabel. The ECB as a whole remains relatively hawkish, but markets are fearing a recession. Any sign of change from officials will hit the euro. Tomorrow sees the policy panel featuring Fed Chair Powell, BoE Governor Bailey, and BoJ Governor Ueda.

The symposium has delivered some major ECB policy announcements in previous years. Former President Draghi in 2017 indicated that the era of QE might be coming to an end. “Deflationary forces have been replaced by reflationary ones”, he said. The euro shot higher and bond yields rose and the central bank duly changed policy course at its next meeting. Today, central banks are heavily data-dependent. But we might still hear some pearls of wisdom from the central bank fraternity over the next few days.

Chart of the Day – Dow buckles under resistance

US stocks have turned lower after hitting multi-month highs recently. We have been highlighting the August top from last year at 34,281 as a key level of resistance in our weekly webinars. It has capped the upside on numerous occasions over the past 10 months. It looks to have done its job again after Friday’s spike up to 34,588. Prices have tumbled since then. Support is at the 50-day SMA at 33,612 and then at 33,359.

Latest News View More

About us.

Minipip was founded in 2019 with the simple aim of making investing, trading, and personal finance easier to understand. The stock market and financial world worries many people; however, it is not as complicated as it may seem.  That’s why at Minipip we offer free resources on many topics, a free financial academy, financial tools and free analysis on shares and other financial instruments.

Minipip is not regulated by the financial conduct authority, and we do not give specific individual advice, though we do work with an abundance of regulated firms to who do offer these services. Visit our recommended brokers and partners page for more information.

Most our information and services are free, and we aim to keep it that way, we do this to help build trust of our users. We believe this kind of information should be available to the public at no cost. Please do not plagiarise any of our work.

Terms of use.

Minipip Limited is registered in the UK. Company number – 12377177. Minipip is an information usage website collecting data from third parties. Any Analysis, news, tools, or resources are for educational or entertainment purposes only. By using this website, you agree to all our Terms and privacy policy.

Spread bets and CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage or volatile market conditions.  A high percentage of investors lose money when trading these products (Varies from broker to broker). You should consider whether you understand how spread bets and CFDs work, and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money. Investments are also risky, and you could lose money with your provider. For more assistance on the products available, contact us now or visit our Resources page.

Minipip are remunerated on client referrals from its partnering brokers. For more information about our partnering brokers or Minipip, please contact us.