Wall Street Suffers on Hawkish Fed Minutes

JFD Brokers
6 min readJan 6, 2022

The US dollar traded higher against most of the other majors yesterday and today in Asia, while equities tumbled during the US session. This may have been due to the more-hawkish-than-expected minutes from the latest FOMC gathering. Now, the focus may turn to the US employment report for December, as strong numbers could add more credence to the case of faster rate increases by the Fed.

Fed Minutes Reveal Willingness for Faster Tightening

The US dollar traded higher against the majority of the other major currencies on Wednesday and during the Asian session Thursday. It gained versus AUD, NZD, CAD, and slightly against CHF, while it underperformed versus JPY and EUR. The greenback was found virtually unchanged against GBP.

The strengthening of the US dollar and the yen, combined with the weakening of the risk-linked currencies Aussie, Kiwi, and Loonie, suggests that markets traded in a risk-off fashion yesterday and today in Asia. Turning our gaze to the equity world, we see that most major European indices closed in the green, extending their new year rally, although at a slower pace, but later in the day, all Wall Street’s main indices tumbled, with Nasdaq losing the most (3.34%). The negative appetite rolled over into the Asian session today as well.

The catalyst behind the switch in investors’ morale may have been the more-hawkish-than- expected minutes from the latest FOMC meeting, which revealed that officials said the “very tight” labor market may warrant sooner rate increases, as well as that they could also reduced their overall asset holdings to tame elevated inflation, another move that could be considered quantitative tightening. Indeed, the minutes brought forth expectations over the first rate increase, with the Fed funds futures now suggesting that this could happen in May. The stronger-than-expected ADP report may have also helped expectations over faster rate hikes by the Fed. Now, the focus may turn to the US employment report for December, as strong numbers could add more credence to the case.

All this confirms our view to stay more optimistic on European stocks due to the fact that the ECB will likely refrain from touching the hike button this year. As for the US equities, after yesterday’s tumble, the technical picture suggests that more declines may be in the works, and this could be the case after a potentially strong employment report tomorrow. As for the US dollar and the US treasury yields, they could continue rising.

S&P 500 — Technical Outlook

The S&P 500 cash index fell sharply yesterday, breaking below the key support of 4758, a move that may have signaled a short-term trend reversal in our view. Today, the index hit support near the 4675 barrier and rebounded somewhat, but we do see decent chances for the bears to take charge again and push the price lower.

A break below 4675 could initially target the inside swing high of December 21st, at around 4655, the break of which could extend the fall towards another intraday high of that day, at around 4616. If the bears are not willing to stop there either, then we could see them aiming for the low of that day, at around 4582.

In order to start examining the bullish case again, we would like to see a strong recovery back above the 4773 barrier, marked by the inside swing low of January 4th. This will confirm the rate’s return within the consolidation pattern formed between December 27th and January 5th, with the bulls perhaps initially targeting the 4807 barrier, or the record high of 4817. A break higher would take the index into uncharted territory and may see scope for advances towards the 4850 area.

USD/JPY — Technical Outlook

USD/JPY traded lower yesterday, after it hit resistance at 116.18. However, the slide remained limited slightly above the 115.62 level, marked by yesterday’s low, and also above the upside support line taken from the low of December 20th. In our view, this keeps the short-term picture positive.

A rebound from near 115.62 could result in another test at 116.18, or perhaps at 116.33, a resistance marked by he high of January 4th. If the bulls are willing to break that barrier, they will enter territories last tested in January 2017, and they may decide to shoot for the high of January 11th of that day, at 116.92.

On the downside, we would like to see a clear dip below 115.35 before we start examining whether the bears have gained the upper hand, even for a while. This could confirm the break below the upside support line taken from the low of December 20th, and may initially target the low of January 3rd, at 114.95. Another break, below 114.95, could extend the fall towards the low of December 29th, at 114.65. or the crossroads of the 114.50 barrier and the upside support line taken from the low of December 3rd.

As for Today’s Events

We have the final UK services and composite indices for December, which are forecast to confirm their preliminary estimates, while later in the day, we get the ISM non-manufacturing PMI for the month, which is forecast to have declined to 66.8 from 69.1.

Besides the PMIs, we also have Germany’s preliminary inflation numbers for December. The CPI rate is forecast to have ticked down to +5.1% yoy form +5.2%, and the HICP one to have slid to +5.6% yoy from +6.0%. This could raise speculation that Eurozone’s headline CPI rate, due out on Friday, may slide as well.

Disclaimer:

The content we produce does not constitute investment advice or investment recommendation (should not be considered as such) and does not in any way constitute an invitation to acquire any financial instrument or product. The Group of Companies of JFD, its affiliates, agents, directors, officers or employees are not liable for any damages that may be caused by individual comments or statements by JFD analysts and assumes no liability with respect to the completeness and correctness of the content presented. The investor is solely responsible for the risk of his investment decisions. Accordingly, you should seek, if you consider appropriate, relevant independent professional advice on the investment considered. The analyses and comments presented do not include any consideration of your personal investment objectives, financial circumstances or needs. The content has not been prepared in accordance with the legal requirements for financial analyses and must therefore be viewed by the reader as marketing information. JFD prohibits the duplication or publication without explicit approval.

CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 68.02% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with the Company. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money. Please read the full Risk Disclosure.

Originally published at https://www.jfdbank.com.

Sign up to discover human stories that deepen your understanding of the world.

Free

Distraction-free reading. No ads.

Organize your knowledge with lists and highlights.

Tell your story. Find your audience.

Membership

Read member-only stories

Support writers you read most

Earn money for your writing

Listen to audio narrations

Read offline with the Medium app

JFD Brokers
JFD Brokers

Written by JFD Brokers

JFD is a leading Group of Companies offering financial and investment services and activities.

No responses yet

Write a response