Important Information

You are visiting the international Vantage Markets website, distinct from the website operated by Vantage Global Prime LLP
( www.vantagemarkets.co.uk ) which is regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority ("FCA").

This website is managed by Vantage Markets' international entities, and it's important to emphasise that they are not subject to regulation by the FCA in the UK. Therefore, you must understand that you will not have the FCA’s protection when investing through this website – for example:

  • You will not be guaranteed Negative Balance Protection
  • You will not be protected by FCA’s leverage restrictions
  • You will not have the right to settle disputes via the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS)
  • You will not be protected by Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS)
  • Any monies deposited will not be afforded the protection required under the FCA Client Assets Sourcebook. The level of protection for your funds will be determined by the regulations of the relevant local regulator.

If you would like to proceed and visit this website, you acknowledge and confirm the following:

  • 1.The website is owned by Vantage Markets' international entities and not by Vantage Global Prime LLP, which is regulated by the FCA.
  • 2.Vantage Global Limited, or any of the Vantage Markets international entities, are neither based in the UK nor licensed by the FCA.
  • 3.You are accessing the website at your own initiative and have not been solicited by Vantage Global Limited in any way.
  • 4.Investing through this website does not grant you the protections provided by the FCA.
  • 5.Should you choose to invest through this website or with any of the international Vantage Markets entities, you will be subject to the rules and regulations of the relevant international regulatory authorities, not the FCA.

Vantage wants to make it clear that we are duly licensed and authorised to offer the services and financial derivative products listed on our website. Individuals accessing this website and registering a trading account do so entirely of their own volition and without prior solicitation.

By confirming your decision to proceed with entering the website, you hereby affirm that this decision was solely initiated by you, and no solicitation has been made by any Vantage entity.

I confirm my intention to proceed and enter this website Please direct me to the website operated by Vantage Global Prime LLP, regulated by the FCA in the United Kingdom

By providing your email and proceeding to create an account on this website, you acknowledge that you will be opening an account with Vantage Global Limited, regulated by the Vanuatu Financial Services Commission (VFSC), and not the UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA).

    Please tick all to proceed

  • Please tick the checkbox to proceed
  • Please tick the checkbox to proceed
Proceed Please direct me to website operated by Vantage Global Prime LLP, regulated by the FCA in the United Kingdom.

×

Celebrating 15 Years of Excellence

Find Out More >
Celebrating 15 Years of Excellence
View More
SEARCH
  • All
    Trading
    Platforms
    Academy
    Analysis
    Promotions
    About
  • Search
Keywords
  • Forex Trading
  • Vantage Rewards
  • Spreads
  • facebook
  • instagram
  • twitter
  • linkedin
  • youtube
  • tiktok
  • spotify

Risk events or risk rewards? Stocks make fresh highs

Vantage Updated Updated Mon, 2024 January 29 10:17
Risk events or risk rewards? Stocks make fresh highs

Headlines

* US Treasury cuts January-March borrowing estimates, yields fall

* Stocks make steady start to an event-packed week

* Euro underperforms as markets slightly increase rate cut chances

* Safe haven gold gains as Middle East worries mount

FX: USD nudged north in a cautious start to a week full of huge risk events. Early gains were given up as bond yields fell on lower Treasury borrowing estimates. Wednesday’s Fed meeting is the highlight. Discussion around the scale and timing of rate cuts will be key. A March rate cuts is currently just under a 50:50 bet. The DXY has been oscillating around its 200-day SMA at 103.51 for a couple of weeks.

EUR was the worst performing G10 currency as expectations of early rate cuts increased. There’s now around 26bps priced in for April and 55bps in for June.  A prominent ECB officials remarked over the weekend that they could cut rates at any time this year.  EUR/USD looks to have broken down through the 200-day SMA at 1.0841. Next support is around 1.08.

GBP continues to trade in the middle of the recent range. Relatively steady BoE rate expectations contrast with the softening ECB outlook which has taken EUR/GBP to multi-month lows. The 50-day SMA in cable at 1.2661 is initial support.

USD/JPY turned lower in the US session as Treasury yields fell below 4.10%. December jobs data is released today. The tight labour market could facilitate sustainable earnings growth. This could alert the BoJ and potential policy normalisation.

AUD and NZD outperformed on firmer China stocks. USD/CAD fell for a third day with stocks and oil prices supporting the loonie. Two failures at 1.3540 leaves 1.3410 as key support. A double top formation could be in play so a break of this neckline could see losses extend to 1.33.

Stocks: US equities made a very solid start to the week with more record highs. The benchmark S&P 500 advanced 0.76% to settle at 4,927. The tech-laden Nasdaq 100 added 1.01% to finish at 17,596. The Dow Jones underperformed closing 0.59% higher at 38,333. This was the sixth record close for the Dow. Consumer discretionary and tech led while energy was the only sector in the red. Stocks rallied after the Treasury announcement expecting to borrow less in the first quarter. Investors are preparing for megacap tech earnings releases this week.

Asian futures are mixed. APAC stocks traded mostly on the front foot. Chinese property sector concerns were elevated. These capped the gains in Hong Kong as a court ordered the winding up of Evergrande. The Nikkei 225 climbed above 36,000 amid currency effects and automaker gains.

Gold found a bid on mild safe haven demand. The 50-day SMA sits just above at $2027.

Day Ahead – Australia retail sales, eurozone GDP

Australia Retail Sales are released today with expectations for a negative print (-2.0%) after November activity (+2.0%) was boosted by changing seasonal trends ie Black Friday and Cyber-week. The ABS sees a major increase in November seasonality over recent years. December is expected to decline with weak underlying momentum and uneven sales over the holiday period.

Eurozone GDP is forecast to show a 0.1% q/q contraction versus similar in Q3. The annualised rate is seen at flat which would match the prior print. The region hasn’t yet dipped into a technical recession as yet, unlike the German economy. Stagnation is the watchword with a soft report likely to cement early rate cut bets.

Chart of the Day $3 trillion Microsoft

Microsoft results kick off a busy week of Big Tech earnings, with Alphabet also reporting after the US close. Apple, Amazon and Meta then publish their earnings after the Thursday US close. That’s five of the Mag7. Microsoft’s stock has surged in recent months, having gained roughly 60% last year. That  helped it become the most valuable company in the world earlier in January. Its market cap briefly overtook that of Apple. The two tech giants remain neck and neck in the scrap for the most-valuable-company tag, each with valuations a shade under $3tn.

Cloud services at Microsoft, (plus those at Amazon and Alphabet) will be analysed to see if recent stellar trend growth can continue. Investment in AI is a key area for markets to watch too, as Microsoft develops solutions for business and integrates its Copilot chatbot into the Windows operating system. The stock is overbought on several momentum measures across sveral timeframes.