Anyone scalping the FTSE Futures??

We've managed to do what the Chinese and Japanese governments can only dream of. Devalued our currency to where our companies can be profitable abroad. Oh joy! :eek:

Next the Americans will be declaring a currency war and piling on huge import taxes on Cheddar Cheese! :rolleyes:
 
We've managed to do what the Chinese and Japanese governments can only dream of. Devalued our currency to where our companies can be profitable abroad. Oh joy! :eek:

Next the Americans will be declaring a currency war and piling on huge import taxes on Cheddar Cheese! :rolleyes:

Trump loves us, we do the unthinkable :)
Back of the queue....no way jose ! :)
 
Trader thoughts - the long and short of it

What a week ahead of us. The event risk by which investors and traders have to navigate themselves through is huge.

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Chris Weston

Chris Weston g+ ChrisWeston_IG
Market Analyst, Melbourne

Monday 16 January 2017 07:37
Pound
Source: Bloomberg

That political risk comes in the form of Trump’s inauguration speech, which promises once again to be one that we simply have to watch, but is likely to stop short of anything that gives more on the fiscal timeline. UK Prime Minister Teresa May’s speech on Tuesday is absolutely shaping up to be the markets highlight though and looking at the moves in GBP this morning we can see that for those who like volatility then the UK is where you want to look.

GBP/USD has traded below $1.2000 this morning, but the bigger moves are seen in GBP/JPY which has fallen 1.6%. GBP/AUD fell 3.5% last week and is trading just above A$1.6000 in early trade and this remains my preference for trading GBP given we saw bulk commodities once again have a strong night on Friday (iron ore, steel and coking coal futures closed up 4.9%, 0.9% and 4.3% respectively). Keep an eye on iron ore futures this week though as we could be staring a break of the December highs of 650 and into blue sky territory, although copper also looks really bullish. This should support AUD/USD, which is threatening to break above $0.7500 and I suspect it will stay above here in the week ahead if we do see a closing break.

It will be interesting to watch the open of the FTSE 100 too as we could be staring at a 15th consecutive gain in the market. This is clearly a reflection of a weaker GBP given some 80% of company’s source revenue from outside of the UK, but I am not sure we have reached a point of maximum euphoria, although the market internals are at concerning levels (91% of stocks above their 50-day moving average).

The market is now positioning for some fairly punchy rhetoric from Teresa May and this idea of “hard Brexit” and a clean break from the single market seems likely, in a bid to gain full control over immigration. Brexit minister David Davis is also adding fuel to fire, with calls for a priority around negotiating ‘third country’ free trade deals, which by all accounts are very hard to achieve unless there is full separation. We also hear from the UK Supreme Court this week and the great unknown is upon us. Forget the run of good UK data, GBP is an out-and-out political currency (it has been for a while) and the prospect of volatility here is now very high.

Aside from the political risk, we also get a number of key economic releases, including China Q4 GDP (expecting 6.7%) on Friday, US core CPI, Aussie employment and policy meeting from the ECB and Bank of Canada. Of course we also start seeing US Q4 earnings ramp up with 9% of the S&P 500 market cap due to report, predominantly in the financials and industrials, although energy also gets a look. We also get a number of Federal Reserve speakers and global leaders speaking at Davos. As I said, the event risk is real.

The lead for Asia though is fairly upbeat for the open, with the S&P 500 closing in the middle of the day’s trading range of 2278 to 2171. Financials had the standout performance, thanks largely to good results from Bank of America and JP Morgan, although the KBE ETF (SPDR S&P Bank ETF), which has been my preferred vehicle for trading the US banks (and reflation), and this ETF failed to close above the top of the recent trading range and was hit with a wave of sellers into $44.50.

There isn’t much to make us feel US futures markets are going to gap to greatly on open at 10am (AEDT), with most of the weekend news focused on Teresa May. Recall US equity markets are shut tonight for Martin Luther King Day, but S&P 500 and commodity futures do open as usual but close early. This suggests our call for the ASX 200 at 5750 (+0.5%) looks fair, with SPI futures closing Friday’s night session up 18 points. We are likely to see good gains in the mining and industrial space, while energy and financials should see fairly flat open.

all that analysis,mr weston will be killing it.
 
With the US market closed today, attention will be divided between the currency market, due to the depreciation of the Pound against the Dollar and the Euro in Asian markets, and some business news. Pound depreciated, with investors worried and awaiting the speech of Theresa May, scheduled for tomorrow, regarding more details on the Brexit plan. Over the weekend, the UK Finance Minister said that if the country does not maintain access to the single market, it will have to pursue a “new economic model”. On the other hand, the Italian debt market and the performance of the banking sector in the country should attract attention, after the Canadian ratings agency DBRS on Friday cut Italy’s sovereign credit rating to BBB (high) from A (low) in a move which could raise borrowing costs for struggling Italian banks.
 
This year broke the tradition of being Alcoa the company that debuted the Earnings Season, due to the split in two companies, so that the disclosure of bank accounts was the starting point. For the fourth quarter, the estimates for results point to a 3% growth in the constituents of the S&P500 index.
 
Volatility is increased number of bureaucrats and central bankers making their usual speeches and nonsense walking in circles talk
Expect it to continue and peak in late spring with the french
 
Just cancel the US session 2017 - non movement.:sleep:

Might need the Trump card for some moves.

All the best moves in Europe and Asia.
 
In the last few sessions, Dax has been penalized by the weakness of the automobile sector and the appreciation of the Euro against the Dollar (due to the strong weight that exporting companies have in the German index). From the technical point of view, several indicators point to an increasing likelihood of a short-term correction.
 
In pre-opening, European markets were trading bullish. The main event of the day is the meeting of the European Central Bank, although no significant development is expected after the announcements in December. The speech should confirm the markedly accommodative nature, thus reiterating that the reduction in the monthly amount of asset purchases announced in December is only an adjustment of the program and not the beginning of a gradual reduction of the volume of acquisitions to zero.
 
Anyone think 'The Trump' (I cant bring myself to call him president) could make the dow rally 270 points today?
 
Since 1953, the S&P500 has valued on average 1.60% during the first 100 days of the first term of a new US President.
 
Anyone think 'The Trump' (I cant bring myself to call him president) could make the dow rally 270 points today?

Yes for sure. (y)

Once he starts talking about building roads, bridges and homes and investing trillions watch the markets rally along with all the people.
 
Just cancel the US session 2017 - non movement.:sleep:

Might need the Trump card for some moves.

All the best moves in Europe and Asia.

I just sleep now. The pain is real everywhere, I'm hoping this doesn't become the norm. Historically ftse ranges were 40 points, 2016/2015 may have been a unicorn
 
we can safely say since brexit the ftse 100 has been pegged to the british pound matching over 80 percent inverse correlation on daily moves. The question is how long will/can this continue? The deviation of the ftse from other world indices has been quiet large from a historical perspective. The dangers of pegging equities directly with currencies comes along when other world currencies decide to not play nice any longer.....let's just say the euro hasn't run out of tricks just yet. With the U.S. interest mainly on the side of the E.U. being united I would not be surprised if the USD and euro collude to trigger a black swan event that will trickle to the ftse 100 spring or summer.
 
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