FTSE falters at 6300 level.
by Brenda Kelly

Yesterday’s upside moves in global indices were yet another symptom of volatility, this time with risk attitude firmly switched on. Today’s a different story, with the FTSE attempting a challenge on the top of its 6 week range, the question remains whether we can break higher and remove the bearish spectre that the current consolidation presents. For the time being, the index has tested the 50 DMA (just below the 6300 mark) but may well find the going tough above here unless commodity prices continue to offer upside momentum and boost producers.

The Reserve Bank of Australia decision to keep rates on hold should have in some respects given a little respite to the concerns emanating from China but in the main the lack of action was in response to the heightened speculation that the Fed are not best placed to hike interest rates in the near term. Thus the reiteration of the need for additional accommodative monetary policy from the RBA will likely cap gains in the Aussie dollar and keep the worries on slowing growth in Asia firmly anchored.

Basic resource stocks have fallen out of favour today and investor bent appears to be back on the defensive with supermarkets, (Tesco +0.83%, Sainsbury + 0.68%) harbouring much of the upside.

Anglo American – 2.66%, Fresnillo – 2.15%, Rio Tinto – 1.3%

The financial sector is also feeling the breeze this morning as a note from Barclays suggests that Fixed income, commodity and FX (FICC) trading in September slowed – this comes on top of a the statement from Morgan Stanley yesterday that global banks third quarter FICC may be lower by some 10-25%.

StanChart – 1.48%, RBS –0.4%, HSBC -1.13%

Glencore -3.35% falling for the first time in 3 days in London despite rallying in Hong Kong, the moves in this stock are not for the uninitiated, but the price has rebounded and recovered much of last week’s losses. Again the copper price will make a difference here – the December futures price for copper has fallen back today as the upside is finding it difficult to break above its 50 day moving average. Nevertheless, most brokers expect to see continued upside in the share price over the next year. The usual ‘Slowing Growth in China’ caveat seems to be the key risk to this assessment.

HSBC have noted recently that copper demand growth has been weak (China) but lacks accelerated recent deterioration. Copper demand is expected to be flat on the year but pick up is expected. ‘’Demand is not falling off a cliff, but demand growth is very low and we think a large demand rebound is unlikely. That said, we think the market over-estimates supply growth…. until the market finds comfort in a global base demand level, the copper price and copper equity prices are likely to see continued volatility’’

SAB MILLER (-1.5%) Brewing firm SABMiller, which is a bid target for rival Anheuser-Busch InBev, has reported a 2% rise in sales volumes for the three months to September.
Growth in Latin American and African drinks volumes offset declines in North America and the Asia Pacific region. Revenues fell by 9% due to the depreciation of emerging market currencies against the US dollar. Questions still remain on whether this merger will take place so it’s a combination of both profit taking and caution in today’s price decline.

Easyjet (flat) forecasting full year profits of between £675m and £700m, on the back of continued strength in passenger numbers. Presently the average broker price target over 12 months is 1981p with the majority of institutions bullish on the stock.

We are calling the Dow slightly lower at present to 16721, down 55 points from yesterday’s close. The major macro point to watch today is the US trade balance. This contracted in July to $41.9bn, the lowest in 5 months which goes some way to indicating that despite the global slowdown the US continues to strengthen. It’s expected to be $42.2bn in August.

Euro trades on Draghi’s hammer
by Ipek Ozkardeskaya

German factory orders contracted 1.8% in month of August; the slowdown in China is pointed as a major reason for the recent shrinkage in German factory orders as 10% of German exports are destined to China.

A second consecutive month of drop in Germany’s factory orders, combined to the ongoing stress around Volkswagen’s emission scandal, sufficed to revive stress again in Frankfurt this morning. The negative sentiment spilled over the European markets.

The DAX opened downbeat. All sectors trade in the red, utilities lead losses. Volkswagen will certainly remain under decent selling pressure and given the declining buying interest a recovery back to EUR 100 could become a challenge.

The recent appreciation in the euro, the delay in Fed’s rate hike expectations and weaker macro picture could soon bring the ECB to announce more policy action. ECB President Draghi will speak in Frankfurt today and could pamper the euro market with additional dovishness. Rising downside risks on the euro keep traders on the sidelines. We are at critical 0.74c and 1.12 against the pound and the US dollar respectively and the buying interest could well fade following how dovish Draghi will sound in Frankfurt today.

BoJ to remain on hold

Japanese stocks traded in the green on rising expectation that the BoJ will need to add additional stimulus if the Fed delays its policy normalisation. The BoJ meets tomorrow yet is expected to maintain the status quo even if the market gives no more than 35% chances for a Fed action before the end of the year. Investors are now looking for more clarity on the investment universe rather than the size of the bond buying program. As big Japanese pension funds step out of the bond market to allocate funds in domestic stocks, the availability of bonds for the BoJ is not going to be a major issue. The BoJ could well maintain the speed of its bond purchases at 80 trillion yen per year and could even consider speeding up its QE. Yet, racing with imported-deflation could become unnecessarily too fatiguing.

The formation of a death cross on Nikkei’s daily price chart signals that the 18445 level, Fib 38.2% retracement on August-September sell-off, could be a short-term top before further recovery. With the amount of cash being injected in the financial system and the well-known domestic appetite in Japanese domestic stocks, a recovery back to 20000 is well on cards. Hence pullbacks could be opportunity for topping up long position in Japanese stocks.

This report has been prepared by Swissquote Bank Ltd and is solely been published for informational purposes and is not to be construed as a solicitation or an offer to buy or sell any currency or any other financial instrument. Views expressed in this report may be subject to change without prior notice and may differ or be contrary to opinions expressed by Swissquote Bank Ltd personnel at any given time. Swissquote Bank Ltd is under no obligation to update or keep current the information herein, the report should not be regarded by recipients as a substitute for the exercise of their own judgment.

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