Advertising
Advertising
twitter
youtube
facebook
instagram
linkedin
Advertising

European Markets Flat as FTSE100 Lags, OPEC Meeting in Focus, Fed Releases Minutes

European Markets Flat as FTSE100 Lags, OPEC Meeting in Focus, Fed Releases Minutes
Aa
Share
facebook
twitter
linkedin

Table of contents

  1. OPEC meets industry heads 
    1. Fed releases minutes 

      European markets were mostly flat; the Stoxx600 remained close to its 50-DMA, while the FTSE 100 remained offered near its 200-DMA, near the 7544 level. The FTSE has been one of the biggest laggards of the year, as capital flew into the tech stocks. The slow Chinese reopening and the crumbling commodity prices didn't help FTSE extend the last year's outperformance to this year.

       

      Happily, more rate hikes from the Bank of England (BoE) and the darkening economic and political picture for the UK is not a cause for concern for the British blue-chip index. A major part of their revenue comes from outside the UK. Therefore, a rotation from tech to value could throw a floor under the FTSE100's selloff near the 7300 level  if of course we don't see a global selloff due to recession and hawkish central banks- 

       

      OPEC meets industry heads 

      The barrel of oil remains sold near the 50-DMA as OPEC meeting with industry heads is due today. Everything that involves OPEC is an upside risk to oil prices. Yet any OPEC-related rally will attract top sellers and won't let OPEC reach stability around $80pb level. The major medium-term risk is that the unresponsive price action could hide a worsening global glut that could hit suddenly in the H2, and send oil prices higher. Until then, bears will keep selling. 

       

      Advertising

      Fed releases minutes 

      The Federal Reserve (Fed) will release the minutes of its latest policy meeting today, and there will clearly be a couple of hawkish sentences that will hit the headlines, given that the Fed officials paused their rate hikes in their June meeting, but their dot plot showed two more interest rate hikes before a real and a longer pause.  

      At this point, the Fed expectations went so hawkish that there is a growing chance of correction. Fed funds futures gives near 90% chance for a another 25bp hike in July, and another 25bp after that is more likely than not. No one expects or is positioned for a rate cut from the Fed this year. Unless there is another baking stress or chaos in the housing market, nothing could stop the Fed from pursuing its battle against inflation. And interestingly, Bloomberg research found out that interest rate increases in the US are benefitting savers more than they are costing mortgage payers, because many mortgages are on fixed rates for 30-years and they have yet to expire.  


      Ipek Ozkardeskaya

      Ipek Ozkardeskaya

      Ipek Ozkardeskaya provides market analysis on FX, leading market indices, individual stocks, oil, commodities, bonds and interest rates.
      She has begun her financial career in 2010 in the structured products desk of the Swiss Banque Cantonale Vaudoise. She worked in HSBC Private Bank in Geneva in relation to high and ultra-high net worth clients. In 2012, she started as FX Strategist in Swissquote Bank. She worked as Senior Market Analyst in London Capital Group in London and in Shanghai. She returned to Swissquote Bank as Senior Analyst in 2020.
      She is passionate about the interaction between the economy and financial markets. She has been observing and analyzing a wide variety of relationships between the economic fundamentals and market behaviour over the past decade. She has been privileged to live and to work in the world's most exciting financial hubs including Geneva, London and Shanghai.
      She has a Bachelor's Degree in Economics and a Master's Degree in Financial Engineering and Risk Management from the University of Lausanne (HEC Lausanne), Switzerland.


      Advertising
      Advertising