US equity futures and Asian stocks were unchanged while European stocks declined after touching the highest level in almost a year, as Italian and Spanish banks dragged indexes lower. The dollar eased back from 14-year highs as bond yields fell on Wednesday and oil extended its advance in increasingly thin trading.
Spanish banks such as including Banco Popular Espanol SA and Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA, fell after a ruling in the European Union’s top court that may result in them handing back billions of euros to mortgage customers. Bank shares tumbled by as much as 10 percent. Borrowers who paid too much interest on home loans pre-dating a May 2013 Spanish ruling on so-called mortgage floors are entitled to a refund from their banks, judges at the EU Court of Justice ruled in Luxembourg Wednesday.
As Bloomberg reports, the court said that a proposed time limit on the refunds is illegal and customers shouldn’t be bound by such unfair terms. Banco Sabadell SA fell as much as 7.5 percent, while Banco Popular slipped as much as 10.5 percent, the largest decliner in Spain’s Ibex 35 benchmark.
"This comes as a surprise and in a bad moment for Spanish banks as most of them would have to make extra provisions to pay for this,” Daragh Quinn, an analyst at Keefe Bruyette & Woods, said by phone. "It will mean pressure on capital generation and profits in the fourth quarter."
Italy’s Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena SpA fell on concern it may fail in its efforts to raise €5 billion euros of funds and after it said its liquidity may turn negative in four months. Oil traded above $53.50 a barrel as data showed U.S. stockpiles declined last week. The yen strengthened and the dollar slid from the highest since 2003 versus the euro.
Looking at Bloomberg data, volumes are thinning and swings in global equities are muted, with European equity volatility dropping to the lowest since 2014. The Trumflation rally has proppelled the Dow Jones to all time highs just shy of 20,000 on prospects for increased government spending in the U.S. and while Ray Dalio offered praise for Trump's policies, Mohamed El-Erian and his former colleagues at Pacific Investment Management Co. say now’s a good time to take advantage of the latest rallies in global financial markets and scale back from risk.
“It makes total sense to take some money off the table,” El-Erian, the chief economic adviser at Allianz SE said Tuesday. “We’ve priced in no policy mistakes. We’ve priced in no market accidents, and we’ve ignored all sorts of political issues,” he said on Bloomberg TV. In October, El-Erian said that he held about 30 percent of his own money in cash.
The MSCI index of Asia-Pacific shares ex-Japan inched up 0.1% after a string of losses. Tokyo's Nikkei share average fell, pulling back from earlier one-year highs to close down 0.3 percent.
In Europe, the Stoxx Europe 600 Index fell 0.1 percent in early trading. The gauge closed at its highest level since December 2015 on Tuesday. European banks led declines, falling 0.5%. Futures on the S&P 500 Index were little changed The gauge rose 0.3 percent to 2,266.5 on Tuesday, a point below its all-time high. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at record 19,974.62.
Yields on 10-year Treasury notes fell less than one basis point to 2.55 percent, after gaining two basis points Tuesday. Germany’s 10-year bund yields dropped two basis points to 0.25%. Among lower-rated bonds.
Spanish 10-year yields fell to five-week lows and Italian
equivalents also fell on concerns over banks. The premium over Spain that Italy would pay to borrow in bond markets briefly topped 50 bps for the first time since just after a failed Dec. 4 referendum on constitutional reform triggered Italian premier Matteo Renzi's resignation.
The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed after climbing for two straight days. The measure’s gain for the quarter is 7.6 percent, heading for the biggest three-month advance since the third quarter of 2008. Many analysts still see the dollar rising further, possibly to parity with the euro. "The euro is in a fight between short-covering pressure and political angst. Economics doesn't come into it at all. If Dow 20,000 is just a number but a magnet all the same, euro parity with the dollar will be every bit as magnetic," said Kit Juckes at Societe Generale. "We'll get there and get over-excited before too long."
"We are seeing quite a lot of volatility. It is driven by the direction of the U.S. dollar. (Gold) is just marking time before it makes its next big move. It is in a very, very strong down channel," said Jeffrey Halley, senior market analyst at OANDA.
The Swedish crown hit a two-month high against the euro after the Riksbank kept interest rates on hold and expanded its asset-buying program.
Lack of more dollar strength pushed oil higher by 0.7% to $53.69 in New York. Crude inventories dropped by 4.15 million barrels according to API data, and ahead of the EIA weekly report today which is expected to show further inventory declines.
Overnight Bulletin Summary from RanSquawk
- European equities trade mostly lower with peripheral banks once again under pressure as concerns continue to mount over the future of Banca Monte dei Paschi
- The standout theme today has been GBP, with losses against the EUR widely acknowledged to be front-loaded Dec buying out of Europe
- Looking ahead, highlights include Riksbank rate decision, US existing home sales and DoE crude oil inventories
Market Snapshot
- S&P 500 futures little changed at 2267.4
- Stoxx Europe 600 down 0.2% to 360.77
- MSCI Asia Pacific little changed at 135.31
- US 10Yr yield little changed at 2.56%
- Dollar index down 0.1% to 103.22
- WTI oil futures up 0.7% to $53.69/bbl
- Gold spot up 0.1% to $1133.26/oz
Top Market News
- Paschi Falls to Record as Investors Said to Balk at Share Offer
- Trudeau Joins Obama in Freezing Arctic Offshore Oil Drilling
- Swedish Central Bank Expands Stimulus as Record Easing Nears End
- Twitter CTO Messinger to Exit, Further Depleting Executive Ranks
- Calpers Staff Says Pension Should Lower Return Target to 7%
- TDK Agrees to Buy InvenSense for About $1.3 Billion in Cash
- Coca-Cola Buys AB InBev Out of Africa Unit for $3.2 Billion
- Tesla Boosts Credit Lines Again to Aid Elon Musk Expansion
- Spanish Banks Lose EU Case Over Mortgage Interest Repayments
- Stanley to Sell Door-Locks Unit to Dormakaba for $725 Million
- FedEx Profit Disappoints as Spending Rises on Ground Delivery
- Nike Earnings Top Estimates, Easing Concerns About Slowdown
- Pandora Says Chief Operating Officer Sara Clemens Resigned
- Arizona Reduces Solar Incentive for Consumer Rooftop Systems
- Amazon Sells Out of Echo Speakers in Midst of Holiday Rush
Looking at Asian markets, stocks traded mostly higher following the positive lead from Wall St where financials outperformed and DJIA posted a fresh record high to close near 20,000. ASX 200 (+0.4%) was led higher by the materials sector after iron ore rose 2%, while Nikkei 225 (-0.1%) swung between gains and losses with cautiousness driven by a pullback in USD/JPY. Shanghai Comp (+1.2%) and Hang Seng (+0.6%) traded with an upbeat tone despite a further 6 Hong Kong banks increasing CNH deposit rates due to tight liquidity, as the PBoC conducted another firm liquidity injection and there were also reports China is to relax limits on stock index futures soon. 10yr JGBs saw quiet overnight trade with mild gains seen after sentiment in Japanese stocks began to sour and after today's enhanced liquidity auction printed a higher b/c than previous. PBoC injected CNY 110bIn in 7-day reverse repos, CNY 70bIn in 14-day reverse repos, CNY 30bIn in 28-day reverse repos. PBoC set the mid-point at 6.9489, virtually unchanged from the last print of 6.9468.
In Europe bourses trade mixed (EUROSTOXX 50 -0.2%) this morning with Spanish and Italian banks underperforming. Spanish banks trade at session lows amid reports that banks have lost EU case on mortgage interest repayments and will face an extra bill and as such, CaixaBank are currently trading lower by 4.7%. Once again, Banca Monte dei Paschi are feeling the squeeze after trading at YTD lows with the latest reports suggesting the bank may only have 4 months of liquidity left (Prey. view was for 11 months) Elsewhere in equities, Volkswagen / Porsche have reached a new deal in which they will recall 83,000 vehicles over emission cheating with the estimated value of the agreement in the region of USD lbln. Fixed income markets are suffering from thin volumes with the only story of note coming from Greece, with the country are struggling to meet their payments to creditors in July 2017.
Top European News
- Spanish Banks Lose EU Case Over Mortgage Interest Repayments
- Italy Bank Rescue Won’t Fill $54 Billion Hole on Balance Sheets
- Meggitt Sells Meggitt Target Systems to QinetiQ Group
In currencies, the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed after climbing for two straight days. The measure’s gain for the quarter is 7.6 percent, heading for the biggest three-month advance since the third quarter of 2008. The yen gained 0.3 percent to 117.56, after falling 0.7 percent on Tuesday. The euro added 0.1 percent to $1.0403, after touching an almost 14-year low of $1.0352 yesterday. The standout theme today has been GBP, with losses against the EUR widely acknowledged to be front-loaded Dec buying out of Europe. Cable has been pressed lower as a result, but this is also down to the pressure seen on EUR/USD, which is struggling to post any sort of recovery through 1.0400 as USD dips are consistently paid up. Some moderation in the AUD as Iron Ore prices rose 2%. Spot trade tight on .7250 today, while NZD/USD gains back above .6900 look temporary at best. USD/CAD buyers seen in the mid 1.3300's, as yield sentiment overrules the Oil price relationship.
In commodities, oil climbed 0.7 percent to $53.69 in New York. Crude inventories dropped by 4.15 million barrels, the American Petroleum Institute was said to report. Data from the Energy Information Administration on Wednesday is also forecast to show supplies shrank. Gold rose 0.2 percent to $1,135.55 an ounce, after closing near a 10-month low Tuesday. As the Christmas break nears, activity slowly grinds to a halt, and nowhere more so than in commodities. Gold saw a minor upturn as the USD gives up some of its better levels, but the prospects of further downside look likely given 2017 projections for the greenback and stocks still very much on the front foot. Base metals are supported as a consequence, as are Oil prices, further bolstered by the API drawdown reported last night. Front month WTI highs seen just shy of USD53.80 so far today.
US Event Calendar
- 7am: MBA Mortgage Applications Dec. 16 (prior -4.0%)
- 10am: Existing home sales, Nov., est. 5.5m (prior 5.6m)
- 10:30am: DOE Energy Inventories