Market movers today
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Today's main even is the announcement around midday of the next UK Conservative Party leader, who is also going to succeed Theresa May as Prime Minister. Everyone expects it to be Boris Johnson. While Boris Johnson is more pro-Brexit than Theresa May, the arithmetic in the House of Commons is unchanged making it difficult for him to force a no-deal Brexit despite it being the default option from a legal point of view. Noticeably, pragmatic Conservative Philip Hammond has said he will step down as Chancellor if Boris Johnson wins and has not ruled out he will bring down his own government if necessary to prevent a no-deal Brexit.
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In terms of economic data releases it is a quiet day. To highlight a few, the preliminary euro area consumer confidence indicator for July, the US Richmond Fed manufacturing index for July and US existing home sales are due today at 16:00.
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Today IMF is releasing an update to its World Economic Outlook.
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The US corporate earnings season continues today .
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This week's main event is the ECB meeting, where we expect tweaks to the forwarding guidance setting the scene for a comprehensive easing package to be unveiled in September, see ECB preview: Warming up for Draghi's Grande Finale, 22 July.
Selected market news
Late yesterday, US President Trump announced a bipartisan budget deal was finalised. This makes it possible for the House to pass the necessary legislation before its summer recess starts on Friday while the Senate will vote on it next week. As it is bipartisan, we think it would make it through congress despite some concerns among both Republicans and Democrats. The deal includes two important things. First, the debt limit will be suspended until 31 July 2021 (i.e. after the presidential election), which means the US Treasury can soon start issuing bonds in a normal fashion again and also rebuild its cash buffer. Second, the automatic reduction of the so-called spending caps, which should have kicked in on 1 October and would have reduced total government spending by more than USD100bn, has been cancelled. This means fiscal policy will not go from being very expansionary to very contractionary but instead become neutral. Despite the agreement on overall funding, there is still a risk of a government shutdown by 1 October if Congress has not passed spending bills.
In Europe, risk is increasing that the river Rhine must close for sea transport in a few weeks , Bloomberg reports. The combination of little rainfall and soon a heatwave means that the water level risks falling below 50cm (already fallen to around 150cm). Last year, the low water level in the Rhine was viewed by many as a contributing factor to the economic slowdown in Europe despite companies' attempt to activate contingency plans by transporting goods by train or trucks (which, however, is much more expensive) and stockpiling.
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Editors’ Picks
EUR/USD stays near 1.0800 after upbeat US data
EUR/USD stays under modest bearish pressure and trades near 1.0800 in the American session on Thursday. The data from the US showed that the real GDP growth for the fourth quarter got revised higher to 3.4% from 3.2%, supporting the USD and weighing on the pair.
GBP/USD stays in daily range above 1.2600
GBP/USD fluctuates in a narrow channel above 1.2600 on Thursday. The better-than-expected Initial Jobless Claims data from the US and the upward revision to the Q4 GDP growth helps the USD stay resilient against its rivals and limits the pair's upside.
Gold pulls away from daily highs, holds above $2,200
Gold retreats from daily highs but holds comfortably above $2,200 in the American session on Thursday. The benchmark 10-year US Treasury bond yield stays above 4.2% after upbeat US data and makes it difficult for XAU/USD to preserve its bullish momentum.
XRP price falls to $0.60 support as Ripple ruling doesn’t help Coinbase lawsuit against SEC
XRP programmatic sales ruling by Judge Torres was completely rejected by another US Court that ruled in favor of the SEC in a lawsuit against Coinbase.
Portfolio rebalancing and reflation trades emerge into Q2
Yesterday’s price action pointed at a possible end-of-quarter portfolio rebalancing as the session saw the laggards of the quarter like Apple and Tesla gain, and the stars like Microsoft and Nvidia retreat.