Equity markets
US markets dropped last night, reversing what was looking like a positive session to finish as the worst single session in the month of April across the major US indexes.
Sparking the sell off was a report that the US administration was eyeing a proposal to increase the capital gains tax rate on wealthy individuals, almost doubling the current rate.
Source: Yahoo Finance
US reporting continued this week, mostly continuing the strong earnings we’ve seen up to now. Coca Cola (KO), IBM (IBM) and “pandemic stocks” Proctor & Gamble (PG) and Johnson and Johnson (JNJ) all beat analysts’ expectations with earnings and forward guidance.
Tech companies Netflix (NFLX) and Intel (INTC) also beat earnings expectations but disappointed on forward guidance resulting in drops in those stocks and causing a further headwind for the NASDAQ.
World equity indices are mostly negative for the week as the strong rally in Q1 has stalled somewhat this month.
Source: Bloomberg
Central Banks
This week has seen a fairly quiet week on the economic announcement front as the US Federal Reserve entered its blackout period due to its meeting next week. We did see two major risk events with both the Bank of Canada and European Central Bank releasing their Monetary policy statements.
Bank of Canada
The BOC released their statement on Wednesday where they left rates unchanged at 0.25%, and reduced its weekly asset purchases to C$3bn per week from $4bn to reflect “the progress made in the economic recovery”.
Both these announcements were widely predicted and were no surprise to the market, what did surprise the market was the bank signalling the second half of 2022 as a timeframe for tightening of rates, previously the bank’s guidance was 2023 as to where they saw economic conditions improving enough to begin a tightening cycle.
The Canadian dollar surged 1% against the US dollar on this hawkish surprise.
European Central Bank
Last night we saw the ECB release its monetary policy. There was no hawkish surprises this time as the ECB struck a cautious tone as expected.
There was no mention of phasing out the ECB’s pandemic QE (PEPP) program and no significant comments on the EUR exchange rate. The ECB next meets in June and unlike this meeting, there will be a slew of economic data between now and then, the expectation at that meeting is to see some clearer forward guidance from the ECB.
Forex Markets
Major currencies were mostly stronger against the US dollar this week. US 10 year bond yields continued to plateau and weaken from the rally in Q1 contributing to the US dollars recent weakness.
Source: Bloomberg
The Japanese Yen which has shown the highest positive correlation to bond yields was the best performer and the Canadian dollar turned around a losing week after the hawkish BOC monetary policy statement.
The Aussie dollar lagged behind as sellers piled in as it entered its 0.78c USD resistance zone causing a technical break to the downside. AUDUSD is now sitting in the middle of its 2023 range at around 0.77 USD.
Source: GO MT4
Cryptocurrencies
Bitcoin
BTCUSD dropped as much as 15% over the weekend, recovering somewhat to gap down on the Monday open at around 56k USD, a drop of around 8% from Friday’s close.
The sell off began when a tweet from a usually reputable source started a rumour that the US Treasury was to prosecute money laundering charges against several financial institutions.
Source: Twitter
BTCUSD has continued down through the week, failing to fill the gap and touching on the 50k USD per coin level.
Source: GO MT4
Ethereum
While Bitcoin faltered, Ethereum hit record highs this week as ETHUSD broke the $2600 USD level.
For the first time in two years, Bitcoin’s “dominance” of the crypto-space has fallen back to 50%, with Ethereum being the biggest gainer. Ethereum now has a market cap of almost $295 Billion USD, pushing it above that of Exxon Mobil, Intel, and Coca-Cola, seeing it its highest value relative to BTC since August 2018.
Source: Zerohedge.com
Monday, 26 April 2021 Indicative Index Dividends Dividends are in Points |
||||||
ASX200 | WS30 | US500 | US2000 | NDX100 | CAC40 | STOXX50 |
0 | 0 | 0.019 | 0.006 | 0.171 | 0 | 0 |
ESP35 | ITA40 | FTSE100 | DAX30 | HK50 | JP225 | INDIA50 |
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
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