Asian markets have tickets to the Draghi stimulus gun show

Markets have rallied after Mario Draghi intimated overnight that further stimulus may come at the ECB meeting in March. A very strong move in equities and commodities overnight looks likely to drive trade forward in Asia today. Copper and oil were big movers overnight, which saw massive gains for the major diversified miners on the FTSE overnight. The change in sentiment was most evident in oil, which rallied over 5% despite another massive blowout in US oil inventories overnight. Asian markets are looking set up for a very strong day. The Nikkei in particular looks set to retrace yesterday’s losses and gain 2.6%. While the big 5.5% gain by BHP’s ADR and 1% gain in CBA’s ADR is pointing to a strong session for both the banks and materials on the ASX today. Combined with the big gains in oil overnight, trade in the ASX today looks like it will be driven by the worst performers of recent days: energy, financials and materials.

  • Markets were understandably very excited by Draghi stating the ECB may be forced into action at their March meeting. Brent had dropped 40% since their last meeting on 3 December , which was likely a key factor behind Draghi’s statement that, “Euro area inflation dynamics also continued to be weaker than expected”. The ECB’s technical team are looking at what may be the best path forward, but cutting the deposit rate further into negative territory and extending the Asset Purchase Program both look likely avenues going forward. The ECB also announced they were to boost their asset-backed securities holdings by 10% by Friday , with the buying focussed on Spanish and Dutch bonds.
  • While markets have unanimously rallied off the news, the moves in EUR/USD do raise some concerns. The Euro initially dropped 1% off the news, but within a few hours of trade had largely retraced that whole move. Markets were underwhelmed by the scale of the ECB easing at their meeting in December and clear divisions within the ECB were clear, with a number of German and Eastern European central bank members voting against the decision. This does raise valid questions over the scale and freedom Draghi will have to carry through on his promise for March. Will he return to overdelivering or will we see another underdelivery of stimulus?
  • The ECB meeting overnight may have set the tone for the Fed and BOJ meetings next week. Despite some weakening in US data of late, I think the Fed will be keen to defend its decision to hike rates in December. There is a growing minority opinion that the next move by the Fed is more likely to be a rate cut. Even though the market sees no significant chance of a rate hike until September, I think Yellen and other Fed members will be keen to zero in on June as the next possible rate hike date, if data allows. While data has weakened and markets have sold off sharply, the wheels are hardly coming off the US economy just yet.
  • With the yen breaking into the 115 handle this week - its strongest level in a year - and inflation way off target, the case for some kind of move or statement towards further easing by the BOJ is pretty strong. A close aide to Shinzo Abe was cited by the WSJ as saying the “Conditions for additional easing have fallen into place”. The “supplementary” easing measures announced in December looked more like a technical rearrangement of the monetary easing program. This only fuelled investor scepticism that the BOJ was increasingly tapped out in its ability to further extend QQE. And unusually, 3 board members voted against even that minor adjustment, with two other members joining the long-standing BOJ hawk, Takahide Kiuchi.
  • Nonetheless, if markets do continue to stabilise in the short term, a long position on the USD/JPY with stops at 115.5 going into the BOJ meeting next week does have a nice-looking risk-reward payoff in the event some

IG MORNING PRICES

Asian markets opening call

Price at 8:00am AEDT

Change from the Offical market close

Percentage Change

Australia 200 cash (ASX 200)

4,904.20

40

0.83%

Japan 225 (Nikkei)

16,402.60

-744

-4.34%

Hong Kong HS 50 cash (Hang Seng)

18,881.60

339

1.83%

China H-shares cash

8,040.70

205

2.62%

Singapore Blue Chip cash (MSCI Singapore)

287.10

3

1.20%

Futures Markets

Price at 8:00am AEDT

Change Since Australian Market Close

Percentage Change

Dow Jones Futures (March)

15,825.00

132.50

0.84%

S&P Futures (March)

1,865.63

12.75

0.69%

ASX SPI Futures (March)

4,855.00

38.50

0.74%

NKY 225 Futures (March)

16,422.50

135.00

0.83%

Key inputs for the upcoming Australian trading session (Change are from 16:00 AEDT )

Price at 8:00am AEDT

Change Since Australian Market Close

Percentage Change

AUD/USD

$0.7008

0.0104

1.50%

USD/JPY

¥117.465

0.500

0.43%

Rio Tinto Plc (London)

£16.53

0.75

4.75%

BHP Billiton Plc (London)

£6.54

0.73

12.58%

BHP Billiton Ltd. ADR (US) (AUD)

$14.98

0.78

5.52%

Commonwealth Bank ADR (US) (AUD)

$77.60

0.79

1.03%

Metals Exchanges (Change are from 16:00 AEDT )

Price at 8:00am AEDT

Change Since Australian Market Close

Percentage Change

Gold (spot)

$1,101.35

-1.85

-0.17%

Brent Crude (February)

$29.60

1.72

6.17%

Aluminium (London)

1479.5

9.50

0.65%

Copper (London)

4438

53.00

1.21%

Nickel (London)

8745

195.00

2.28%

Zinc (London)

1509

26.50

1.79%

Iron Ore (62%Fe Qingdao)

$41.30

-0.30

-0.72%

IG Iron Ore (CNH)

¥315.95

4.10

1.31%

ANGUS NICHOLSON
Market Analyst
IG, Level 15, 55 Collins street, Melbourne VIC 3000
D: +610398601747 | T: +61398601711www.ig.com

IG Markets

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