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Dollar continues to hold slightly firmer, risk showing some hints of calming down

The risk rout calms down ahead of North American trading

The greenback continues to lead the charge in the major currencies space but gains have been trimmed somewhat across the board as risk sentiment exudes some calmer tones.
The DAX fell by nearly 2% earlier in the session but has trimmed losses well beyond opening levels to be down by just 0.6% currently. Elsewhere, S&P 500 futures are down by 0.2% after briefly turning flat as compared to the roughly 1% drop earlier.
Of note, even the pickup in the VIX yesterday is starting to abate a little but it may still be too early to draw much conclusions until Wall Street enters the fray later.

 

VIX
The overall risk mood remains fragile still following the battering yesterday and while there are some calmer tones now, it may yet turn chaotic once again later in the day.
As for the dollar, it is mostly reacting to how risk sentiment is playing out over the past few sessions so expect more of the same ahead of the weekend.

The first look at fourth quarter US GDP highlights a busy economic calendar

What’s on the economic calendar today?

The first look at Q4 GDP is due at the bottom of the hour and the consensus is an annualized rate of +4.2%. There are considerable divergences among economists with a range of 2.7% to 6.8%.
The key swing factor will be personal consumption which rose at a 41.0% annualized pace in Q2. It’s expected to rise another 3.1%.
At the same time as the GDP report we get:
  • Weekly US initial jobless claims
  • US December advance goods trade balance
  • December US wholesale inventories
  • Canadian December building permits
Basically all the news will hit at the same time today and then later we get a US 7-year auction.
Outside of the US, the ECB’s Schnable speaks at 1715 GMT on a panel. A report yesterday suggested that markets were underestimating the chance of a rate cut.

China likely to avoid setting 2021 GDP target over debt concerns – report

Reuters reports on the matter

The report says that China will drop setting a GDP target for a second straight year on concerns that maintaining one could encourage provincial economies to ramp up debt, citing policy sources familiar with the matter.
However, no decision has been made yet on whether that will officially be the case. Adding that China may instead again use employment and other measures as implicit GDP targets.
The sources also say that government advisers who are calling to scrap the target again this year appear to be gaining the upper hand. A source is reported as saying:

“We will not set an explicit target but in reality there will be a target. We will not emphasise the importance of achieving said target at all costs.”

On inflation though, China is expected to set a target of around 3% this year as compared to the 3.5% target last year (actual inflation was 2.5%).

Nikkei 225 closes lower by 1.53% at 28,197.42

Asian equities dragged lower on sour mood in Wall Street yesterday

Nikkei 28-01
The Hang Seng is down 2.0% and the Shanghai Composite is down 1.6% in a sea of red for Asian equities today. The softer risk mood is also reflected in US futures still, with S&P 500 futures down 0.3% and Nasdaq futures down 0.5%.
It is looking to be a hiccup for equities to wrap up January trading, despite the Fed reaffirming that they will stick with their current policy stance for quite some time yet.
The bond market may be reacting to some hints of risk aversion but 10-year Treasury yields slipping under 1% also tells the story that the Fed put is well and truly alive.
I would argue any further retracement here still represents a “healthy” correction in the big picture and dip buyers are surely waiting in the wings to step back in.
The whole GameStop saga is also bringing some unwanted attention to the stock market in general and that perhaps is messing with investor appetite for now.

FOMC – Powell will err on the side of removing accommodation too slowly rather than too quickly #AnirudhSethi

The Federal Open Market Committee statement and Powell’s press conference on Wednesday US time were both non-eventful.

Responses are coming in, this a quick summary on what Oxford Economics have to say:
Powell signalled the FOMC would rather risk erring on the side of removing accommodation too slowly then removing it too rapidly, for several reasons:
  • heightened uncertainty around the pandemic remains
  • the economy and labour market are far from full recovery
  • new policy framework is asymmetrically dovish
  • policymakers want to avoid ‘taper tantrum’ that would send long-term rates higher

Oxford Economics forecast is for a ‘gradual’ QE taper to being in 2022. but by the end of that year, the Fed’s open market account will remain very elevated.
The Federal Open Market Committee statement and Powell's press conference on Wednesday US time were both non-eventful.

FOMC responses coming in – “no surprises” #AnirudhSethi

A summary of the main point Lloyds make about Wednesday’s Federal Open Market Committee

  • policy update contained no surprises.
  • left interest rates and its asset purchase target unchanged
  •  The Fed continues to promise that it stands ready to offer more support to the economy if warranted but there seems to be growing confidence that more action may not be needed. Nevertheless. any tightenng in monetary policy is still probably a very long way away and markets don’t expect an interest rate hike until 2024. 
More:
  • Recent US economic data has actually been mixed
  • the signs are that the vaccine rollout is increasing the Fed’s confidence that economic conditions will improve significantly later this year
  • Hopes of further fiscal stimulus from the Biden Administration probably have provided a further boost
On the ‘tapering’ of QE question, which some officials at the Fed have indicated may commence in 2021, Lloyds remind that Powell has been quick to “stamp on this idea” and reiterated the point again at his presser.
A summary of the main point Lloyds make about Wednesday's Federal Open Market Committee 

Facebook and Tesla shares fall hard after earnings

MSFT was a warning

Facebook earnings were also strong — but not as strong as MSFT or NFLX — and shares have responded with an afterhours fall to $257 from $274.
Tesla shows what happens when you miss. The company earned 80-cents compared to $1.03 expected and, even with a modest revenue beat, shares are down over 10% after hours.
MSFT was a warning
That’s not a pretty picture.
There’s also Whirlpool, which makes things like washers and dryers which is down to $203 from $216 after a decent beat. The company commentary so far is upbeat, with the CEO highlighting the strong housing market in statement.
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