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JP Morgan, GS and Morgan Stanley ended the day above the line. On Monday, S&P 500 increased by almost 1%, Nasdaq gained 0.34%

JP Morgan, GS and Morgan Stanley ended the day above the line. On Monday, S&P 500 increased by almost 1%, Nasdaq gained 0.34%| FXMAG.COM
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Table of contents

  1. Fed meets. 

    Bank stocks had a volatile session on Monday. UBS lost up to 16% after the Credit Suisse deal but closed the session more than 1% higher.  

    In the US, JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley closed the day with 1 to 2% of gains. The regional US banks also had a calm session, except for the First Republic Bank - which plunged 47% after a second credit downgrade in just a week from S&P.  

    JP Morgan is reportedly in talks with other leading banks to do more, after big US banks put a combined $30 billion in the First Republic Bank as a show of support last week. 

    In bonds, the announcement of full write-down of Credit Suisse's AT1 bonds got bond investors confused, as equities should be written down before any other paper in the 'bonds' category. Authorities said that equities will be written down first to end confusion. JP Morgan and Morgan Stanley said that they are willing to buy CS's AT1 bonds for 2 cents to sell them back 'somewhere' for 5 cents. 

    The BoFA's implied bond volatility index MOVE is lower than last week's peak but is still at the highest levels since 2007/2008 subprime crisis.  

    Equity traders, however, are focused on waning bank stress; the S&P500 closed the day 0.89% up, as Nasdaq 100 gained 0.34%.  

    Fed meets. 

    The Federal Reserve (Fed) begins its two-day policy meeting today in the middle of a storm.  

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    If the European Central Bank (ECB) decision serves as a cheat sheet, the Fed could hike by 25bp and say that it has tools to inject liquidity in the system to contain crisis.  

    Investors are also focused on what the Fed will do with the Quantitative Tightening (QT). I don't think that the Fed will reverse its balance sheet unwinding strategy, or to pause it – because the crisis intervention is a tactical and a short-term move, while the Fed's huge $8.6 trillion balance sheet must be unwound sooner rather than later. 

    In this context, the Fed's balance sheet ticked higher since the SVB collapse, but the Fed members couldn't comment on the latest events, because the trouble hit the fan while they were in their pre-Fed quiet period.  

    Read next: Dow Jones and S&P 500 closed near the recent highs. Positive finish of the US markets has helped Asian markets| FXMAG.COM

    As a result, all the comments that have not been made since the SVB collapse will come out from Fed Chair Jerome Powell's mouth, and the March dot plot tomorrow after the decision.  

    This morning, activity on Fed funds futures assesses a 75% chance for a 25bp hike. This probability tipped a toe below 50% yesterday.

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    In the FX, the US dollar index slipped below the 50-DMA yesterday on expectation that the Fed will stay cautious at this week's meeting given the turmoil across the financial place.  

    Gold traded above the $2000 psychological mark on Monday, but the price of an ounce is back to below $1980 this morning, thanks to the calming nerves regarding the price action on the banks front. A further improvement in sentiment could rapidly pull the price of an ounce to $1900 mark.


    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.


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