Investors pause ahead of Trump address

Photo: Reuters

Photo: Reuters

Published Feb 28, 2017

Share

Cape Town - Investors hit the pause button on Tuesday,

with European stocks and the dollar trading little changed before President

Donald Trump addresses Congress. Oil retreated as gold also edged lower.

Shares of raw-material producers declined as the outlook

for industrial metals worsened, while construction companies rose a second day

after Trump said Monday he’ll spend “big” on infrastructure. Treasuries gained

after falling at the start of the week as the odds of a Federal Reserve

interest-rate increase in March jumped.

Even as global equities climbed to record levels,

investors have remained wary as they await details of Trump’s economic policies

and watch for signals on the timing for higher rates. The White House began

sketching out plans Monday, as Trump followed promises of infrastructure

spending with a caution that tax details won’t become clear until after the

costs of repealing the Affordable Care Act are known.

“Dollar bears should take caution if Trump follows

through on infrastructure and Yellen ratchets up the rate-hike rhetoric to end

the week,” said Stephen Innes, senior currencies trader in the Asia Pacific at

Oanda. “The big question for the market is, will Trump use tonight’s platform

to execute?”

Fed Bank of Dallas President Robert Kaplan said policy

makers should raise interest rates “sooner rather than later” and not pay

excessive attention to market expectations. The chance of a rate hike at the

central bank’s March 14-15 meeting jumped to 50 percent, federal funds futures

showed, from 34 percent just five days ago.

What’s coming up

this week:

Trump is expected to outline his priorities for the

nation in an address before a joint session of Congress on Tuesday night in the

US Fed officials are making speeches this week, including Chair Janet Yellen

who addresses an event in Chicago on Friday. This week’s economic data include

US personal income and spending. India and Australia will report on

fourth-quarter GDP. China’s PMI data are expected to show continued expansion.

Here are the main moves in markets:

Stocks

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index was little changed by 10:08

a.m. in London, after four straight days of losses. The index is still up 2.6

percent for February. Asia stocks erased gains after Japan’s Topix gave up

almost all of a 1 percent rise, with the steepest paring coming in the final

half hour of trading. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index trimmed its monthly gain to

2.2 percent.

Currencies

The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index fell less than 0.1

percent. The yen added 0.3 percent to 112.35 per dollar, after sliding 0.5

percent Monday to snap a three-day winning streak.  The British pound

slipped 0.1 percent to $1.2425. The currency is down 1.2 percent for the month.

BLOOMBERG

Related Topics: