Monday’s stellar day for equities (re-bal?) is set to give Europe a solid open

News

Morning all,

Equities went gangbusters yesterday, with the S&P 500 rising
1.9% on a steady advance, paced by the growth stocks. The Nasdaq Composite
(+3.4%) and Russell 2000 (+3.1%) outperformed with solid gains of over 3.0%.

Given the dire January, many have been keen to point to month-end
rebalancing as the prime reason for this upside move. Technicians will be
buoyed by the fact that SPX reclaimed it’s 200dma of 4437.

This upside, and the lack of Asian participants to dampen
the exuberance, means that all major European bourses are starting in positive
territory – Indicative prices have FTSE 100 up 0.6% and DAX up 0.8% as of 0620
GMT

As Newsquawk notes, Euro was bid thanks to the downside in
the buck, helping EUR/USD reclaim 1.12 while all eyes will be on the ECB rate decision
on Thursday with a focus on the inflationary outlook as we. At the same time,
the statement and other tools are set to remain relatively unchanged. Market
pricing has been leaning hawkish. Money markets are now fully pricing in a 10bp
hike by September and over 25bps by December amid a hotter than expected
inflation print for Germany across all metrics.

On the Fed Speaker front; Daly sees rate hike early March,
touts 1.25% rate by year-end; George expresses concern over yield curve; Bostic,
who got many in a flap with his 50bps comments in the FT over the weekend, felt
compelled to make an unscheduled statement (usually happen when they fear their
words have been misconstrued) says a 50bps in March is not his preferred
action; Barkin wants Fed to get ‘better positioned’.

Oil prices edged higher, trading near seven-year highs hit
last week, as investors bet supplies will stay tight, with a limited production
hike by major oil producers and a strong post-pandemic recovery in fuel demand.
Of course, the latest monthly Reuters survey of OPEC oil output for January showed
production rising by just 210kbpd MoM to 28.01mbmd, led by rises in Saudi Arabia
while output fell in Libya and Iraq, which is barely 50% of the pledged 400k
hike in output. To the annoyance of Crude bears everywhere.

For UK PM Boris, ‘wait for the Sue Gray Report’ has become ‘wait
for the Met Police Report’ – If the betting markets are anything to go by, and
for sentiment, they usually are, Boris is through the worst. The market now eased
to almost a 50% shot that he’s still around at the Tory Party Conference in the
first week of October

Perhaps as a guide to just how toxic Westminster is for the
PM right now, he’s opted to fly to Kyiv for talks with President Volodymyr
Zelenskyy.

Coming up in the European session, we have German Retail
Sales and Unemployment data, UK Mortgage numbers, plus a raft of Manufacturing PMIs
from the continent – Most important, in my humble opinion, is the French CPI data, which we are expecting to print deflation (-0.2% on the MoM) rather than inflation.
Of course, as we should all know by now, inflation is the entire ballgame right
now, with its direct impact on monetary policy.

Keep it tight!

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