A look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike
Dolan
Even with the uncertainty of what most pollsters see as a dead
heat in the White House race, world markets are in a upbeat mood
as Americans cast their ballots on Tuesday and await the result.
One reason for the relative calm is that bookmaker odds on a
Republican "clean sweep" of the presidency and both houses of
Congress have lengthened compared with last week, with gridlock
now the best guess whoever wins the Presidency.
That takes some of the edge off fiscal policy worries, even
if trade tariff calculations remain in the mix as the president
can pursue them independently.
Another prosaic reason is stock markets tend to rally once
the anxiety of the waiting passes.
And then there is also the small matter of a second Federal
Reserve interest rate cut of the year on Thursday that's likely
to follow either way too.
Albeit in more edgier pandemic times, the VIX "fear index"
index of U.S. stock volatility was some 15 points higher
than it is now on the eve of the last tight election in 2020 -
and it fell more than 10 points within a week of the contested
results.
At less than 22 on Tuesday, the VIX is almost half its
highest close during the yen-related blowout this August and
December VIX futures are four points lower.
The real volatility this time around is bond markets, where
the Treasury MOVE index is more than twice what it was
in 2020 - and at its highest for a year.
That said, Treasury yields held steady into the
vote at 4.3% and Wall Street stock index futures were
steady to firmer too.
Many of the recently buoyant "Trump trades" backing a win
for the Republican candidate - betting on a higher dollar
and Bitcoin and weaker Mexican peso and Chinese
yuan - remained on the back foot as prediction markets on
the outcome are now basically 50-50. But these did steady
somewhat after Monday's recoil.
While some of the results will start to stream in overnight,
it could take days for the result to be clear given the reliance
on the handful of swing states that will likely decide the
outcome.
Perhaps the most important battleground, Pennsylvania, did
not have a clear winner in 2020 for four days after election day
as officials sifted through a backlog of mail ballots. The state
is among only a few that do not permit election workers to
process mail ballots until 7 a.m. ET on election day - which
means it could take days before the outcome is known.
CHINA BOOST
World stocks were mostly higher, with Chinese mainland
and Hong Kong benchmarks outperforming after
news that the country's services activity expanded at the
fastest pace in three months in October - an early signs that
Beijing's big stimulus push may be improving confidence.
With the standing committee of China's top legislature
meeting this week too, Chinese Premier Li Qiang said he was
confident China would meet this year's growth target and the
government had the requisite fiscal and monetary tools for that.
The Australian dollar edged higher after Australia's
central bank held the line on interest rates at a 12-year high
of 4.35% on Tuesday, as expected, and cautioned policy would
need to stay restrictive for some time yet.
Japan's Nikkei gained more than 1% after its return
from Monday's holiday as the yen held steady and the
corporate earnings season impressed.
Helped by this week's higher oil price, Britain's
was higher too - but British government bonds
remained on edge after last week's government budget
and the weakest demand of the year at Tuesday's 10-year gilt
auction.
In corporate news, Boeing ( BA ) shares rose 2% ahead of the
bell after U.S. West Coast factory workers accepted a new
contract offer late on Monday, ending a bitter seven-week strike
that halted most jet production and deepened a financial crisis
at the troubled planemaker.
In Europe, Vestas, the world's largest maker of
wind turbines, was a negative surprise and its shares slid more
than 10% on a lower-than-expected third-quarter operating profit
and disappointing outlook.
British fund manager Schroders ( SHNWF ) also dropped 10%
after it reported net outflows of client funds of 2.3 billion
pounds ($3 billion) for the quarter ended Sept. 30.
Key developments that should provide more direction to U.S.
markets later on Tuesday:
* U.S. Presidential and Congressional Elections
* US October service sector surveys from ISM and S&P Global;
Canada September trade balance
* US corporate earnings: Super Micro Computers, Marathon, Dupont
De Nemours, Archer-Daniels-Midland, Emerson, Microchip
Technology, Jack Henry, Devon Energy, Assurant, International
Flavors and Fragrances, Yum! Brands, Gartner, Progressive,
Cummins, STERIS, Henry Schein, Targa etc
* US Treasury auctions $42 billion of 10-year notes
* European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde and ECB
board member Isabel Schnabel both speak, ECB Vice President Luis
De Guindos attends European Union finance ministers meeting
* Bank of Canada and Bank of Japan publish meeting minutes
(By Mike Dolan,