Thursday, 26 May 2016

The day ahead 26 May 2016

Good morning,

Asia stocks were mixed on Thursday following a rally during the previous session, but energy firms were mostly up after oil surged past $50 a barrel for the first time this year. Investors seemed to brush off another strong lead from Wall Street and Europe, treading softly as the Group of Seven leaders' summit kicked off in Japan, where the sputtering global economy is likely to top the agenda. The Nikkei is up 0.5%, the ASX +0.3% with Shanghai and the Hang Seng down 0.97% and 0.41% respectively.

The yen surged on Thursday, taking some of the wind out of the sails of the recently buoyant dollar and prompting investors to cover positions against a backdrop of potential event risks, including a speech by Federal Reserve chief Janet Yellen. A sudden spike in the yen in relatively illiquid conditions triggered stop-loss orders and brought the Japanese currency as low as 109.42 against the US dollar from a session high of 110.235. Japanese Finance Minister Taro Aso said on Wednesday that he told his G7 counterparts at a finance leaders' meeting last week that Japan will raise the tax as planned. But he did not say whether that meant Japan has officially pledged to the international community that it will go ahead with the increase.

The Aussie dollar was also a mover overnight as Q1 capex came in well below expectations (-5.2% v -3.2% exp), the initial move lower on the headline (0.7162 vs US dollar) then saw the Aussie rally back through the 0.72 handle as the full details were digested. Elsewhere the US dollar has been on the back foot throughout the session as risk trades are again prominent.

Having bottomed out near $1218 region during Wednesdays trading, gold staged a solid comeback overnight on the back of profit-taking after the recent weakness. The bullion finally brought an end to its six-day losing streak rising to highs of $1234.35 before consolidating around the $1230 handle.

Brent crude passed $50 a barrel for the first time in 2016 on Thursday after data showed a fall in US crude inventories, adding to expectations of a tightening global market. Markets are now eyeing a June 2 meeting of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries in Vienna where it is hoped a deal on reducing production can be reached. WTI currently sits at $49.88 and Brent $50.10.

So to the day ahead and first up we have UK Second Estimate GDP (0900 BST). The markets had their first look at GDP figures for Q1 with the release of Preliminary GDP in April, which showed a gain of 0.3%. This was short of the estimate of 0.5%. Little change is expected in the Second Estimate GDP release, with a forecast of 0.4% which is in line with the macroeconomic figures released lately.

US: Durable Goods Orders (1330 BST) Manufacturing appears to be recovering from its recent recession, but the preliminary numbers for May via survey data suggest otherwise. Markit’s purchasing managers’ index revealed that output fell this month for the first time more than six years. The hard data for April, however, is expected to deliver brighter news, albeit in terms of a one-month lag relative to the latest PMI update with headline orders for durable goods rising for a second month in a row, which hasn’t happened since last summer.

US: Initial Jobless Claims (1330 BST) New filings for unemployment benefits fell a hefty 16,000 to a seasonally adjusted 278,000 for the second week of May. The decline is the first weekly slide since mid-April. The question is whether the recent surge in claims will continue in today’s release. Although last week’s report offered an encouraging change of pace, it’s always risky to reason from one number with the volatile claims data. A second weekly decline, however, will offer a more reassuring message. The crowd will be looking at today’s claims data to help decide if the PMI warning is noise or an early sign of trouble for the labour market.

Good luck

Anish S. Lal – VP Sales
FX & Precious Metals, Atom8 Financial Services LLP
2nd Floor, Centenary House, Palliser Road, London W14 9EQ, UK
T: +44(0)20 3405 3910 | M: +44 (0)7983701816 | anish.lal@atom8.com | www.atom8.com

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