Markets got an extra dose of risk-on vibes thanks to yet another set of stimulus measures from China.
Meanwhile, the Swiss National Bank (SNB) announced its third interest rate cut in a row and hinted at more to come.
How did your favorite asset classes perform?
Headlines:
Broad Market Price Action:
After yesterday’s market doubts about China following through on its stimulus plans, the Politburo came out with an announcement of concrete plans to provide fiscal support and enable the economy reach the government’s growth targets.
This sparked a pickup in risk-taking during the Asian trading session, putting equity futures on a steady climb and lifting higher-yielding assets like gold and bitcoin as well. BTC/USD went on to test the $65,000 mark later in the day while the S&P 500 and Dow surged to fresh record highs.
However, crude oil was barely able to take part in these rallies, as the energy commodity tanked on news that Saudi Arabia ditching its $100/barrel price target and will instead join the rest of its OPEC+ allies in boosting output in December. After a slight pullback during the London session, crude oil resumed its slump to end more than 3% lower for the day.
FX Market Behavior: U.S. Dollar vs. Majors:
Forex traders were in a risk-on mood early in the day, thanks to the Chinese Politburo’s announcement of fiscal support measures and the central bank’s 0.50% reserve ratio requirement cut. The safe-haven dollar slipped as markets digested the potential impact of these aggressive stimulus efforts on the global economy while AUD and NZD took the lead.
USD/JPY managed to hold its ground, though, bouncing back in the green after a bit of a tumble during the London session. The U.S. dollar drew some support from relatively upbeat mid-tier economic data, as there were no revisions to the 3.0% growth figure for Q2 2024 and the initial jobless claims figure turned out better than expected.
The Greenback also extended its climb against most of its peers when Fed head Powell delivered some opening remarks during the Treasury Market Conference, but eventually returned its gains as risk appetite favored higher-yielding currencies. Consolidation came back in play for most of the dollar pairs before the end of the U.S. session.
Upcoming Potential Catalysts on the Economic Calendar:
- Spanish flash CPI at 7:00 am GMT
- German unemployment change at 7:55 am GMT
- Canadian monthly GDP at 12:30 pm GMT
- U.S. core PCE price index at 12:30 pm GMT
- U.S. personal income and spending data at 12:30 pm GMT
- U.S. revised UoM consumer sentiment index at 2:00 pm GMT
Data flow could be lighter than usual today, leaving traders with plenty of room to prep for the release of the U.S. core PCE price index a.k.a. the Fed’s preferred inflation measure. Expectations are for another 0.2% monthly uptick in price levels, although any major surprises could still rock the dollar’s trends.
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