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Asian Markets In Wait-And-See Mode

Published 2021/12/03, 07:59
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US stock markets roared higher yesterday as Omicron nerves settled on initial indications that the new variant is very contagious but less severe symptom-wise. Whether that is the case remains to be seen, and Omicron sentiment will continue driving swings in the market direction into next week. It was enough to flush the FOMO gnomes of Wall Street into action, though, with stock markets rallying impressively on Wall Street.

However, believe it or not, other things are going on in the world. Most immediately, the US releases nonfarm payrolls today, and assuming the Omicron news remains less end of the world, a print above 550,000 jobs should see the faster Fed-taper trade reassert itself. That may nip the equity rally in the bud, while the US dollar and US yields could resume rising.

Asian markets are subdued today across asset classes, and even US equity futures have edged lower. There is a fair bit of negative news floating around, and Asia as a whole, after a tumultuous week, looks ready to sit out today's session on the sidelines.

The US nonfarm payrolls are as good a reason to be cautious as any. Additionally, the US Congress has passed a bill to fund the US Government into mid-February temporarily. Still, no progress has been made on lifting the overall debt limit, which could be hit as early as Dec. 15.

Staying with the US, the US SEC has announced a tightening of listing requirements surrounding ownership and the certifying of auditors in overseas territories who audit foreign companies listed on US exchanges. That is directly aimed at China, of course, which has no intention of allowing any such thing.

Today, markets are speculating that the requirements will see an exodus of Chinese companies from the US exchanges. China ride-hailing giant Didi Global (NYSE:DIDI)announced it would delist from the US after a troubled IPO that also angered the Chinese Government, never a smart business move.

It comes after the Grab SPAC IPO flopped yesterday, with a classic stagging of the IPO occurring. Buying the IPO and dumping into the initial rally. That saw Grab finish 20% lower on the first day of trading. Time will tell if Grab's "patriotic" listing in the US will remotely justify its $40 billion valuations. I suspect not, and that the only winners will be the pre-IPO shareholders.

Nerves continue to swirl in the China property space as well today, with troubled developer Kaisa failing to gain the 95% approval to swap out its maturing $400 million, note due next week, for longer maturities. Default risks have now reached deafening levels for Kaisa, who has until Dec. 7 to pay. Additionally, a 30-day grace period on an $82.50 million coupon for Evergrande (OTC:EGRNY) falls on Dec. 6 next week.

China's Caixin Services PMI for November fell unexpectedly to 52.1 this morning from 53.8 in October, raising fears that domestic consumption is fading on the Mainland on rising labor and energy costs, as well as particular virus restriction.

That has overshadowed improved services PMI data from Japan, Australia, Singapore, and Hong Kong. South Korean markets are struggling as well, with virus cases surging, capping gains on the KOSPI and also the Won.

Add in the danger of being whip-sawed on random Omicron headlines. It's hardly surprising Asia wants to sit the rest of today out. I expect a similar response from Europe as well. Next week, we see a lot of CPI releases from the region, including China, as well as the Reserve Bank of Australia and Reserve Bank of India policy decisions, plus China trade data.

The week after will see a central bank policy meeting frenzy, including the US FOMC, and depending on where the world is with Omicron, several central banks will struggle to hit the W for Wimp button regarding their inflation outlook. Volatility has been the winner this week, and I fully expect it to continue to do so through the rest of December.

Asian Equities Refuse To Follow the US Lead

The perpetual mega-bulls of the US stock market had their day in the sun finally as US indexes moved sharply higher as the armchair epidemiologists of day trading decided that Omicron, while contagious, would be mild symptomatically.

The S&P 500 jumped 1.42% higher, with the NASDAQ Composite rising by 0.83%, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average leaped by 1.83%. In Asia, some short-term profit-taking is evident as the news wires turn slightly sour in Asia, futures on all three indexes edging around 0.15% lower.

With US equity futures markets unable to maintain upward momentum today, tier-1 US data due this evening, virus nerves and concerns reappearing around China property and China US-delisting worries, Asian markets have mostly rallied, but only modestly so.

The Nikkei 225 has climbed by 0.35%, with the KOSPI climbing by 0.45%. Mainland China sees the Shanghai Composite 0.55% higher, with the CSI 300 rising by 0.35%. Hong Kong is in the red, though, as China property nerves sap sentiment. The Hang Seng has fallen by 0.65%.

Across the region, Singapore is 0.25% higher, with Kuala Lumpur up 0.30%, while Jakarta has fallen by 0.30%. Manila has jumped by 1.05%, with Bangkok down 0.15% and Taipei unchanged for the session. Australian markets have recorded cautious gains, the All Ordinaries edging 0.10% higher and the ASX 200 gaining 0.20%.

European markets will likely unwind some of yesterday's losses, but gains will be limited ahead of the US nonfarm payrolls. As ever this week, the street is one negative Omicron headline away from turning sharply lower en masse. If the virus news ticker stays quiet, a higher US nonfarm payrolls print could see equity gains capped, with a slightly lower or on target print of 550,000, not enough to remove faster Fed-taper fears entirely.

The US Dollar Rallies

With Omicron nerves easing, the US Dollar reasserted itself, rallying modestly versus significant currencies and holding steady in the EM space. The dollar index finished 0.10% higher at 96.12, edging higher to 96.17 in Asia. Notably, both the Australian and New Zealand Dollars, key risk-sentiment barometers fell once again to 2021 lows, hinting that caution remains the critical mantra in currency markets still.

EUR/USD has slid back below 1.1300 to 1.1295, and an upbeat US nonfarm payrolls tonight will set up a test of 1.1200 again next week. In a similar vein, GBP/USD has moved back through 1.3300 to 1.3390, with a retest of 1.3200 possible. USD/JPY rose as Yen haven buying subsided, climbing to 113.20 this morning. If indeed we are at "peak-Omicron," then this week's low of 112.50 is likely to be the low for the pair for the foreseeable future.

The EM space was relatively sedate, but the US Dollar has resumed advances once again versus Asia FX today with USD/KRW, USD/IDR and USD/MYR up around 0.20%. A firm nonfarm payrolls number tonight will increase the pressure of the Asian currencies, whose monetary policies, buy and large, are not aligned with a Federal Reserve set to increase the pace of its taper.

OPEC+ Surprises, With Conditions

Oil markets rallied despite OPEC+ surprising the markets and the author by deciding to continue their pre-planned 400,000 BPD production increases this month. OPEC+ has left a huge poison pill in their statement, retaining the right to convene an immediate meeting and to change their mind if Omicron continues to send oil prices lower. That has made it dangerous to be short at these levels, and the net effect was to lift prices higher after the market sold immediately on the headline, before reading the small print.

Brent crude finished 2.25% higher at %70.50 a barrel, while WTI rallied 2.25% to $67.35. Both contracts have continued to rally in Asia, rising 0.50% to $70.85 and $69.70 a barrel. Unless we get a major Omicron escalation, I will stick my neck out and say that this week's lows for Brent and WTI likely represent the lows for the medium-term. The relative strength indexes (RSIs) are still oversold, meaning both contracts remain vulnerable to a further short-squeeze.

The lows for Brent at $65.80 and WTI at $62.50 a barrel form short and medium-term support, and it is unlikely the market will want to test OPEC+'s mettle at this stage. The grouping has shown itself to be relatively immune to pressure from the US President, amongst others. That said, virus concerns continue to linger, meaning Brent crude will struggle to recapture $75.00 a barrel and WTI $70.00 a barrel in the nearer term.

Gold's Standing 8-Count Continues

With virus nerves subsiding and the Fed-taper stronger US Dollar story reasserting itself, gold continued to take a standing 8-count, remaining near its weekly lows. Gold fell 0.77% to $1768.25 an ounce before weekend risk hedging buyers in Asia lifted it back to $1772.50 this morning.

Gold is flirting with its last major support level at $1770.00 an ounce, and failure tonight sets up a possible wave of stop-loss sellers and a retest of $1720.00, possibly as early as next week. Gold's inability to rally with skyrocketing risk aversion, a weaker US Dollar, or weaker US yields remains deeply concerning.

Gold has resistance between $1791.00 and $1792.00 an ounce, where the 50, 100, and 200-day moving averages are clustered. Behind that is $1800.00 and then $1815.00 an ounce.

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