Spreadex Market Update

US data largely disappoints, Eurozone’s Greek-inspired losses widen




As the jobless claims figure gradually climbs towards 300,000 the dollar suffered a blow this afternoon; the worse the jobs sector the less likely the Fed will be to raise rates, leading to notable rebounds from the previously damaged pound and euro.

There should be more movement from the dollar this evening, with the likelihood of two divergent speeches from Fed members; noted dove Dennis Lockhart is set to talk to business leaders in Florida, whilst heavy-hawk Richard Fisher speaks a few hours later. The markets have been sensitive to the comments of the Fed’s members of late, so it will be interesting to see what they do with these potentially differing sentiments.

In the continuing machinations of this earnings season, Goldman Sachs went the way of JPMorgan instead of Wells Fargo and Bank of America, beating revenue and profit forecasts by significant margins with its first quarter release this afternoon; Citigroup then followed suited, its own bested estimates helping reverse the 2% slump the bank had found itself in this year.

The Greek saga continued to rumble on in the Eurozone, with a EU spokesperson trotting out the usual line that not enough progress has been made by Greece. In response to the FT report this morning, Varoufakis denied that Greece asked the IMF for a delay; however his rebuttal seems to be based on semantics surrounding how informal Greece’s 'informal approach' was. Greek PM Tsipras claimed he is ‘firmly optimistic’ that a deal can be found by the looming deadline, a stark contrast to the tone struck by the people Tsipras needs to get the deal from, and unreflective of the Greek-inspired declines the Eurozone markets felt as Thursday continued.

The FTSE continued its own IMF-inspired losses, despite the best efforts of JP Sports and Debenhams, who were up 5.6% and 4% respectively. The FTSE’s situation was exacerbated by the mixed performance of its commodities sectors; with Saudi Arabia telling OPEC it pumped 659k barrels per day more crude in March, Brent Crude began to slip from the recent highs is saw yesterday, dampening the positive run the oil sector had been on so far this week.


DISCLAIMER


Spread bets and CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 64% of retail investors lose money when trading spread bets and CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how spread bets and CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money. For professional clients, spread betting and CFD trading can also result in losses larger than your initial stake or deposit.

Spreadex Ltd is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority, provides an execution only service and does not provide advice in any way. Nothing within this update should be deemed to constitute the provision of investment advice, recommendations, any other professional advice in any way, or a record of our trading prices. This update does not constitute or form part of an offer of, or solicitation for a transaction in any financial instrument, nor shall it or the fact of its distribution form the basis of, or be relied on in connection with, any contract therefore. Any persons placing trades based on their interpretation of the comments or information within this update does so entirely at their own risk.

No representation, warranty, or undertaking, express or limited, is given as to the accuracy or completeness of the information or opinions contained within this update by Spreadex Ltd or any of its employees and no liability is accepted by such persons for the accuracy or completeness of any such information or opinions. As such, no reliance may be placed for any purpose on the information and opinions contained within this update.

The information contained within this update is the intellectual property of Spreadex Ltd and is protected by UK and International copyright laws. All rights reserved. Users may however freely download, distribute and reproduce extracts of the contents, subject always to accrediting Spreadex Ltd as the source and providing a hyperlink to www.spreadex.com.