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Analysis

US500

Green for 2020 in the NAS100, with bonds working like a dream

Chris Weston
Head of Research
8 May 2020
Having said that yesterday’s session was one for the bears, today sentiment shifted and the bulls re-asserted themselves.

The NASDAQ 100 cash has broken out (topside) and the fact the index is now higher for 2020 won’t have gone unnoticed - although we’re yet to see the futures also break out, but it doesn’t feel far off. Small caps outperformed large caps, with the Russell 2000 working +1.6%, while the S&P 500 has closed +1.2%, with 78% of stocks higher, with energy, financials and materials leading the way, and healthcare moving to the bottom of the pile – how’s that for rotation?

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(Source: Bloomberg)

I guess the bulls would have liked not to have seen a steady bleed lower into the close, with the index having been as high as 2901. So, the tail-off removes some of the gloss from a market that at one stage had seen the VIX index into 30.37%. Throw in some broad USD weakness, with USDMXN having a solid run lower and seemingly wrestling the mantra as the beckon of risk in FX from AUDJPY, and we’ve seen sentiment turn. Don’t discount the influence that has played out as a result of USDCNH weakness (yuan strength), with the market getting excited on reports that USTR Lighthizer and Chinese VC He will meet next week.

As I have mentioned in recent reports, if you focus on the macro to make trading decisions, with the US-China relationship a growing theme, then USDCNH must be on the radar – a stronger CNH is good for the AUD and equity sentiment more broadly.

We saw the weekly jobless claims come in at a slightly above consensus 3.169m claims, and while this is in no way a positive from a humanitarian perspective, its seems to have galvanized the market's confidence in forecasting tonight’s NFP estimate. Judging by the moves, this is not a market worried about holding risk in the jobs report, where 22m jobs are expected to have been lost and the unemployment rate to rise to 16%.

The US fixed income market may offer some clues here, with a solid rally seen all through the curve. New lows have been printed in US 2-year Treasuries, with the fed fund futures trading above par (100) through the December 2020 contract and now pricing an element of negative rates from December and into 2021. We saw this priced in the OIS (swaps) markets, which I highlighted yesterday, but now in fed funds too. We can point to comments in the session from Fed member Bostic, re-iterating its view of the Fed able to deploy its “full arsenal” – it’s hard to read into this too greatly given under the current legal system the fed funds effective rate cant drop below zero.

Some have also regurgitated an article from noted economist Kenneth Rogoff arguing for negative rates. 

Either way, the rates markets is speaking out and this could have huge implications for the US banking sector, bond yields and the USD. It is a complicated subject, but it is interesting to see US banks working well despite the moves in rates and the slight flattening of the yield curve, with long-end yields coming lower more aggressively. One suspects Fed general Powell will try and put some perspective on this debate soon and let us know what he feels, and I suspect it may cause the market to part unwind these negative rate bets.

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We saw a solid bid in crude, with Brent crude lifting into $32 before rolling over an hour or so before the US equity cash open. The Saudi’s may have talked about lowering the discount on crude shipped to key customers, but the initial euphoria has not held. What did hold were the gains in the NOK, and that despite a surprise rate cut by the Norges Bank. EURNOK shorts are working, although EURJPY has given some back as the JPY softened on the slight bid in risk.

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On the docket today, there will be a small focus on the RBA’s SoMP but I can’t see this being a huge vol event for AUD traders, who continue to watch USDCNH and S&P500 futures.

By way of house news, we have put USDTRY on closings only given Turkey’s regulator has banned its local banks from dealing with three international players and liquidity is going to be an issue as sell-side banks and FX market makers are less willing to offer a two-way price. This could lead to incredibly dislocated markets and one that poses a risk to all involved.

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