CFDs and spread bets are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 71% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.

Financial market research and analysis

Our analysts have their fingers on the pulse of the world's financial market news.

CFD trading is high risk and may not be suitable for everyone.
Pound breaks above the $1.30 resistance

The pound couldn’t resist to the 2.3% monthly rise in UK retail sales, versus 1.1% expected and -1.8% printed a month earlier. Cable finally broke above the $1.30 level and rallied on stops to $1.3023.

The key mid-term resistance stands at 1.3040, the major 38.2% retracement on post-Brexit sell-off, if taken out would mark the end of the mid-term, post-Brexit bearish trend in GBPUSD.

FTSE opened downbeat; energy (-2.25%), industrial (-1.36%) and mining (-1.10%) sank on the back of de-Trumpflation risks.

The stronger pound should weigh for the UK’s big caps and encourage a further slide toward the 7400p.


Pricing the de-Trumpflation risks

Political tensions in the US are escalating as the FBI persists on deepening the Russian probe investigation. The US Justice Department has named the former FBI chief Robert Muller as the special counsel to investigate an eventual Russian influence on the US’ 2016 election campaign and the outcome. Muller is well respected by both Democrats and Republicans and has been described as an excellent choice for the matter.

There are rising voices that President Donald Trump could be impeached. At this point, one could hardly imagine a worse scenario than an eventual Trump impeachment for the markets. Even it is too early to point the latter as the base-case scenario, if Donald Trump is impeached, his massive infrastructure spending plans and the colossal tax reforms would never see the daylight. Hence, the past six-month’s reflation rally would face severe reversal risks. If the markets were to retrace the Trump-reflation gains, this would trigger a decent ‘deflation’ squeeze. A quick glance to recent stock price history could give an indication of the risks. The Dow Jones rallied from $17’480 to above $21’100 following Donald Trump’s victory on November 9 election; this is roughly a 21% rise. Likewise, the SPX surged from $2’030 to above $2’400, which is more than 15% increase.

The VIX index, which has hit the lowest level since 1993 a week earlier, surged by 35% to 15.69% on Wednesday. Investors are now rushing into alternative markets, such as option and futures markets, to hedge their long positions in the US stocks.

The Dow Jones dropped 372.82 points yesterday. Bank and mining stocks were among the most sensitive sectors to the deflation risks. Financials erased 3.26%, as mining stocks tumbled by 3.21% on rising fears that the Trumpflation trade could eventually dis-inflate.

The US futures reversed losses into the European open. The Dow Jones futures recovered 35 points, S&P500 and NASDAQ futures retraced 7.25 and 20.75 points respectively. The early European session gains met quick response from sellers.

Any recovery in the US stock prices are expected to remain limited, as mounting political uncertainties increase the chances of delay on the US economic and fiscal agenda.


Trumpflation impacts on global markets

Unfortunately, the US stocks are not the only ones concerned. The global Trumpflation virus contaminated the major stock markets across the globe. Since November 9, the German DAX rallied more than 26%, Europe’s Stoxx 600 gained past 12%, the Japanese Nikkei stepped up to 24%, the Australian ASX 200 soared nearly 18% before the sell-off started at the beginning of May and the UK’s FTSE rose by more than 12%. Even the Brazilian stocks believed in the reflation story for a moment and added 22% between December and February. Of course, Brazil has got its own problems. Brazil is plunging back to a bribery crisis concerning its newly elected President Michel Temer – following the former President Dilma Rousseff’s impeachment last year.


Safe haven demand benefit to gold, franc and yen

Gold tests $1’264 (major 61.8% retrace on April – May decline). Surpassing this level is expected to strengthen the bullish trend, along with the golden cross formation on the daily chart (50-day moving average crossed above the 200-day moving average). The next positive targets stand at $1’276 (minor 76.4%) and $1’295 (April peak).

The USDJPY slipped below its 200-day moving average (111.00) and is testing the minor support at 110.60 (23.6% retrace on January – April decline). The 110.00 mark is back on the radar. Offers eyed at 112.00/112.15 (major 38.2% retrace). Japan’s first quarter GDP growth accelerated to 2.2% year-on-year annualized from 1.2% printed a month earlier, beating the analysts’ expectations of 1.7%. The Bank of Japan (BoJ) Governor Kuroda gave no time to the BoJ-hawks to resurge. The JPY-bears remained on the sidelines as he told PM Abe that the bank will continue with the ultra-expansive monetary policy.

The Swiss franc surged to the highest levels since November against the greenback.


Aussie faces resistance pre-0.75

The AUDUSD is the only G10 currency that has not been subject to the USD correction in Asia. The Aussie extended gains to 0.7467, as the unemployment unexpectedly dropped from 5.9% to 5.7% in April. Though, job losses came from full-time jobs (-11.6K). The deterioration in the global risk appetite and soft iron ore prices could cap gains pre-0.75 level.

14-12-2020

GBP jumps on Brexit talks extension
The British pound has jumped in early trading this week after the UK Prime Minister and EU Commission President agreed to extend Brexit talks beyond Sunday. MARKETSThe S&P 500 fell on Friday, wrapping up a losing week, as the outlook for additional fiscal… Read more

10-12-2020

AirBnB IPO today
At its IPO price of $6 per share, Airbnb ABNB, is expected to raise at least $3.5 billion with an initial market capitalization topping $40 billion. MARKETSStocks fell on Wednesday, retreating from the record highs set earlier in the day, as tech shares strug… Read more

9-12-2020

S&P 500 closes over 3,700
MARKETSThe S&P 500 closed above 3,700 for the first time ever on Tuesday as Pfizer started to roll out its coronavirus vaccine in the U.K., lifting hope of the economy recovering in the near future. The Dow Jones gained 0.4% while the Nasdaq Composite clim… Read more

8-12-2020

Global stock market cap reaches $100 trillion for 1st time
The value of all the stocks in the world put together has reached a giant $100 trillion for the first time. MARKETSThe Dow fell 0.69% Monday, led by Intel and broad-based weakness in value stocks as rising Covid-19 restrictions offset optimism over an imminen… Read more

4-12-2020

Pfizer vaccine supply chain problems
MARKETS The S&P 500 fell slightly from record high. Major U.S stocks indices cut gains quickly in the final hour of trading after Dow Jones reported Pfizer now expects to ship half of the doses it had previously planned this year after finding raw materia… Read more

2-12-2020

Dollar Purge Continues
The US dollar dropped to fresh two-and-a-half year lows on Tuesday, with EUR/USD rising above the widely-watched 1.20 handle. MARKETSNews• Stocks in Asia-Pacific were mixed in Wednesday morning trade after major indexes on Wall Street surged to record highs o… Read more

1-12-2020

Bitcoin hits record high
The price of Bitcoin climbed 8.7% on Monday to reach a fresh record high of $19,857.03 - overtaking its previous peak made in 2017. MARKETSNews• Asia stocks rise as the Caixin/Markit manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index for November came in at 54.9 — its… Read more

30-11-2020

OPEC meeting starts
Today OPEC+ begin a 2-day meeting to decide whether to begin producing an extra 2 million barrels per day of oil, or delay for another 3-6 months. MARKETSNews• Asia-Pacific markets are mixed this morning while S&P 500 futures are down half a per cent. Ind… Read more