European stocks are charging higher after the US earning season kicked off on the right foot. US banks are often considered a proxy for the broader economy. As a result, their earnings are strong drivers of sentiment.
The upbeat numbers served to reinforce expectations of a strong US economic recovery. If the world’s largest economy is performing well, this is good news for the global economy and risk sentiment.
The European economic calendar is quiet this morning, with in-line inflation data from Germany providing little impetus.
Positive earnings in Europe have given markets a boost, overshadowing concerns over the Covid vaccine rollout on the continent.
The FTSE is outperforming its European peers, boosted by heavyweight miners, which are tracing metal prices higher. A weaker US dollar combined with rising expectations of strong Chinese economic expansion in the first quarter are keeping metal prices elevated. Chinese GDP data is due on Friday with 18.9% year-on-year growth pencilled in.
US futures are pointing to a stronger start on the open in what is expected to be a busy session. The US banks that reported yesterday provided a positive cue for more of the same today, with Bank of America and Citigroup under the spotlight.
Investors will also be watching US retail sales data for March, which is expected to show a leap in consumer spending. Forecasts are for a 6.3% increase in sales month-on-month, up from a 3.5% decline in February. Improving weather conditions plus the disbursement of stimulus cheques are factors expected to ramp up retail sales. Treasury yields here will be key – a surge in sales could send yields higher and actually drag on stocks. This data will test the extent to which the markets have bought into the Fed’s dovish mantra.
US dollar eases, AUD rises on solid job market
The US dollar is holding steady after three consecutive days of losses. More soothing commentary from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell yesterday served to cement the idea that the Fed will remain accommodative until the economy reaches its goals. After frequent speeches by Powell and other Fed policymakers supporting the US central bank’s accommodative stance, the markets appear to be buying into the low-rates-for-longer tune.
Both the pound and the euro are trading in a muted fashion amid a lack of fresh catalysts.
German inflation data came in as expected with a 1.7% year-on-year increase in March, up from 1.4% in February. On a monthly basis, inflation increased 0.5% in March, down from 0.7%, as the ongoing lockdown keeps price increases restricted.
The Australian dollar is putting in a more convincing performance, up 0.4%, aided by the broad upbeat mood in the global markets and an impressive jobs report. Australian job creation beat forecasts in March and unemployment declined to a one-year low. The outperformance of the Australian job market is driving demand for the Aussie dollar.
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