|

US Stocks lose momentum as Coronavirus spreads

US stocks are losing momentum in what has been a very good start to earnings season as Asia braces for the impact of the coronavirus.  Asian stocks were lower across the board as the virus spreads and concerns grow that China did not act fast enough to contain the virus.  At least 17 people have dies and almost 600 have been sickened.  China also had to quarantine Huanggang city, a city with a population of 7.5 million people.  With Wuhan and now Huanggang city on lockdown, the fear is that food and medical supplies will become thin and that we could see more travel bans throughout China.  The Lunar New Year holiday, which is normally a boom for travel and casino companies, will be a bust this year.  Singapore also announced their first case of the Wuhan virus this morning. 

Earnings results came in mixed this morning after strong results from Comcast but softer revenue from P&G.  Union Pacific also reported results that showed a strong decline with carloads, but shares climbed higher after the outlook painted a rosier picture than what CSX forecasted last week. 

ECB

The euro was little changed after the ECB kept rates steady and affirmed their stance on rates and bond buying.  ECB President Lagarde for much of her press conference had hawkish hints on stabilizing inflation and an improvement on the risks to growth, but the euro refused to rally.  The key takeaway of this ECB day was the launching of the first strategic review since 2003.  Lagarde refrained from explaining her preference on what she would prefer the inflation strategy to be.  The strategy review should be done by the end of the year and all decisions before then will independent of the review. 

Much of Wall Street expects the ECB to be on hold this entire year.  The euro will primarily focus on the upcoming German PMI data and IFO survey.  If we continue to see better than expected data from Germany and optimism with the outlook, the euro could target the upper boundaries of its tight trading range.     

Oil

Oil prices are getting battered by falling demand concerns that have stemmed from growing travel bans in China.  China has quarantined Wuhan, a city of 11-million and Huanggang city, which has a population of 7.5 million.  Oil is struggling to stabilize here since both the supply and demand side news have been mostly bearish.  Oil can’t shake non-OPEC production oversupply concerns followed by fading optimism OPEC + will be able to continue to delivering production cuts deeper into 2020.  Oil is resting on critical support and swelling supplies in the US could be the straw that breaks its back in the short-term.   

Gold

Gold prices are softening despite a wave of risk aversion in Asia, as investors become skeptical the upcoming Lunar New Year holiday will see limited gold purchases from China.  All the travel bans occurring in China have shifted the focus of many to securing food and medical supplies and not holiday buying of gold.  Gold sellers are focusing on a barrage of bearish signals that include the possible formation of a death cross.  The yellow metal has been a tight $30 range over the past two weeks and it seems that when it finally breaks momentum traders could help extend the move. 

Author

Ed Moya

Ed Moya

MarketPulse

With more than 20 years’ trading experience, Ed Moya is a market analyst with OANDA, producing up-to-the-minute fundamental analysis of geo-political events and monetary policies in the US, Europe, the Middle East and North Africa.

More from Ed Moya
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD flirts with daily highs, retargets 1.1900

EUR/USD regains upside traction, returning to the 1.1880 zone and refocusing its attention to the key 1.1900 barrier. The pair’s slight gains comes against the backdrop of a humble decline in the US Dollar as investors continue to assess the latest US CPI readings and the potential Fed’s rate path.

GBP/USD remains well bid around 1.3650

GBP/USD maintains its upside momentum in place, hovering around daily highs near 1.3650 and setting aside part of the recent three-day drop. Cable’s improved sentiment comes on the back of the Greenback’s  irresolute price action, while recent hawkish comments from the BoE’s Pill also collaborate with the uptick.

Gold clings to gains just above $5,000/oz

Gold is reclaiming part of the ground lost on Wednesday’s marked decline, as bargain-hunters keep piling up and lifting prices past the key $5,000 per troy ounce. The precious metal’s move higher is also underpinned by the slight pullback in the US Dollar and declining US Treasury yields across the curve.

Crypto Today: Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP in choppy price action, weighed down by falling institutional interest 

Bitcoin's upside remains largely constrained amid weak technicals and declining institutional interest. Ethereum trades sideways above $1,900 support with the upside capped below $2,000 amid ETF outflows.

Week ahead – Data blitz, Fed Minutes and RBNZ decision in the spotlight

US GDP and PCE inflation are main highlights, plus the Fed minutes. UK and Japan have busy calendars too with focus on CPI. Flash PMIs for February will also be doing the rounds. RBNZ meets, is unlikely to follow RBA’s hawkish path.

Ripple Price Forecast: XRP potential bottom could be in sight

Ripple edges up above the intraday low of $1.35 at the time of writing on Friday amid mixed price actions across the crypto market. The remittance token failed to hold support at $1.40 the previous day, reflecting risk-off sentiment amid a decline in retail and institutional sentiment.