 Okay, very good morning Anthony here gonna talk to you a little bit about the US stock market some statistics and also some Bank commentary of a more bearish Disposition and we'll talk about what the reason is behind that and how likely it is that it might materialize And what does that look like on the charts? We're also going to talk a little bit about the RBNZ We've seen some quite volatile price action in the Kiwi dollar overnight following their latest rate decision Of course this comes after they've gone on to complete lockdown following a very small outbreak of COVID-19 Which has gone from one case to now for overnight We're just gonna talk about some Fed commentary and we've even heard from one of the main doves kashkari But talking more now about the timing of tapering again Confirming that not about if but when and then we'll have a look at UK CPI It's come out a lot lower than expected this morning at 2% versus expected 2.5 And yet the pound has not moved and I'll explain why so this is your market briefing It's Tuesday the 17th of August. Let's get straight into it before I begin Don't forget if you're watching this on YouTube, don't forget to like and subscribe to the channel I'd really appreciate it, but let's start with this this is a look at the S&P 500 and Someone to shed this on social media But I thought it was quite in-fitting given what I've also heard out of the US chief equity strategist Mike Wilson at Morgan Stanley earlier this week You had a call on the S&P to move back down to 4,000 We'll have a look at the chart in the moment, but bearing in mind We're trading at 44 45 at the moment. That's a significant and technical correction in markets If that was to materialize but first off we had a Continuous run of positive closes remember We had seen the S&P 500 now post the fifth consecutive session of gains up till yesterday And you remember in the briefing yesterday I was talking about whenever that happens it almost always constitutes at some point in a snap of that and a fairly Quick downward move and I think we did see that to a moderate degree yesterday And if I just look at this S&P chart here in a little bit more detail on a daily You better see what I'm talking about. So this was that broader trend higher that we've been seeing over the course of the last couple of months going back to really March of this year and then we're in that really tight range to Commence the month of August. You know, it's been particularly low volatility Volumes have decreased quite typical seasonally of the summer period And then we had a bit of a breakout on the downside of that very tight trading range And so we blip lower, but we have recovered and we saw some decent buying off those initial Lows and in fact the Asia pack session we have seen the Asian indices moderately higher But we'll get to that in a moment going back to this chart though statistically speaking this goes back to 2002 And it was just looking at the general S&P price movement upon of which was highly kind of talked about yesterday The 100% gain from the trough of March 23rd of 2020 to where we printed At the recent all-time high which is an 100% move and what that tends to see and you know history Does have a pattern of repeating itself and and certainly when you get this type of movement People start to ask these questions and interestingly it came as well Amid a bit of press coverage around Morgan Stanley And US Secretary strategist Mike Wilson has a year-end price target for the S&P of 4 000 as I said Additionally between now and the end of the year. He also expects a correction even greater than 10% Stating the combination of lower than consensus earnings next year Low evaluation leads us to believe that there's very little upside and if any to major US equity indices over the next few quarters However on the positive side He added that the correction would allow for the next leg of the economic expansion with the bull market to commence Very important point there to understand short-term market movement against a long-term view on markets because You know, don't get me wrong. This chart has gone up And so yes, the pullbacks here on a hundred percent gain are very violent again It's this idea the analogy of the stairs up the escalator down But the destination is up and so worth keeping that in mind depending on your time frame of investment In that respect, but let's just translate that to the charts and have a look at a couple of things And a couple of levels here that I would say are probably worse watching So going off where we are at the moment from today's price One of the key areas I'd be looking at here in the short term that's more near to current price Areas is this area here. So I'll draw a rectangle to make it easier to see I think this area that we found some support both At the beginning of the week on Monday and also so far today 44 32 and a half is quite a big level here on the daily chart for the s&p on the futures I think any further breakdown of that the next key level I'd be looking at is down here 43 65 and a quarter again I'm not inferring that this would be intraday necessarily But just key levels technically to watch and then further down here at 42 42 52 and three quarters To give this some context as to what I've just discussed with their mess So from where we're trading at the moment the range low to test down at those levels would only be a quarter percent move A breakdown of that and in fact yesterday's low was quite telling because as you can see from yesterday's low That was also a relative point of interest now and will be again to the downside from these previous highs That low that we had back on the 9th of august And also yesterday responding to that level so level on the downside here That would look realistic in any type of further extension on the move lower potentially on the intraday At 41 11 3 quarters would be around a less than 1 percent move Down towards where we're trading late july would be around a 1.75 percent move Down towards 42 50 area We're talking more now of a four and a half percent type move If we go to what ms. We're calling for 10 percent Well, then we've got to go all the way down here To four thousand and four thousand you can see sounds pretty dramatic a 10 percent correction But that does in fact just put us back To where we were basically trading at the prior all-time highs that we've seen in march so All in all if you think about the pandemic journey that we've been on That doesn't seem that unrealistic And in fact ms did say that it could even run even deeper than that Before and importantly and I would agree Is the fact that even if this did materialize You're going to get a whole ton of buyers come in and lift that market and ultimately I think The direction would still be higher reminiscent of this graphic So yeah a couple things to think about there And to be aware of some interesting notes you can find on my my twitter handle If you want to have a look in a bit more detail of what I've just discussed But elsewhere talking of the overnight session quick look at the charts overall and general sentiment After that weaker handover on wall street where the major equity indices the s&p And the dow were down about seven and eight Tents of one percent and as that down a touch lower or touch more nine tenths But asia moderately higher not really too much to speak of there But snapping again a bit of a continuous losing streak So japan china hong kong all posted gains overnight and equity index futures seen marginally higher going into the european open this morning Again to keep in mind although it was a lower close on wall street We did see a decent bounce in the last couple of hours trade on wall street to narrow those losses Overnight we did have some really wippy price action in the kiwi dollar And this came after the central bank which left rates unchanged at zero point two five percent That they signalled their intention to tighten policy Later they basically said that they projected a hike by year end and another hundred basis points of increases in 2022 So yeah difficult for the market to handle because preparation was for a right hike to be executed, but given the Um impromptu lockdown that's happened because of one case that's happened in the country very aggressive reaction Being taken by the authorities has basically delayed that from happening But ultimately that they still see tightening before year end So very wippy in the kiwi dollar reaction overnight obviously complicated by that snap national virus lockdown The other thing to be aware of is a couple of fed comments I'm quite interestingly a well-known dove, but non-voter Neil Kashkari spoke overnight and said it could be Reasonable to start reducing the feds bond buying program later this year Although that would depend on you know what the labor market So in fitting what everyone else has said and similarly then what has come out of feds rosengren Who's the head of the boston fed Again non-voter. He said he would support the central bank announcing next month that it could begin to wind down Or taper on its bond buying This autumn and to get it on track to halt them by the middle of 2022, but once again With inflation target pretty much met at this point in time in terms of the emphasis on their policy weighted decisions It's certainly centered still on the jobs data And again that will continue to take precedence in terms of the the actual definitive timing around tapering Both the announcement and the execution and duration of This morning we've had uk cpi Came in considerably weaker than expected analysts were actually anticipating it to remain or to be A bit of a drop-off at 2.3 percent from the prior 2.5, but actually under shot and came in at 2 percent It appears weak on the surface But if you actually look at the pound the pound has seen close to no reaction at all So again for anyone You know observing markets or trading these markets This is so key to be aware of is not to just take it on face value Do your preparation do your research And particularly in this pandemic period because the headline cpi number people look at in the uk is the year in year figure and Apart them despite appearing weak on the surface then It reflects largely base effects from the pandemic in 2020 which saw disruptions to usual calendar price reductions in closing and firmer petrol prices so bit more of a mechanical shift Rather than an inflection point for inflation to now move lower Instead the expectation is is that the august report the next cpi report that comes out Is expected to return to the normal pickup and resume that upward trend as outlined through the Forecasting of the bank of england. So this isn't like the the end of the inflationary pressures PPI is still generally higher as well Suggesting that there's still some inflationary pressures in the pipeline. So this is a one-time base effect anomaly Because of what happened in 2020. So yeah worth worth always keeping that in mind. Otherwise you could get caught short in a market that generally is unreactive for those aforementioned reasons The other thing we've had overnight is the usual Regular infantry data the market hasn't really moved too much on this So it's more of a reference point really for the does. We'll get later on this afternoon The crude figure was a draw of 1.163 million So a draw down but not as deep as analysts were anticipating at 3.1 Cushing draw 1.735 gasoline draw 1.2 million distillates a bill of 502 thousand Quit look at the calendar then for the day ahead So with the uk numbers out of the way you get the hicp numbers from the eurozone For july at 10 a.m. But these are final readings and not expecting anything exciting there So it pushes us further forward into the afternoon u.s. Housing starts building permits deary inventories at 330 Then you've got the fmc minutes, of course at 7 p.m. This evening People will be looking at that Definitely for any further details or insight of course around this idea about The timing around the withdrawal of the fed support through its bond buying. So i.e. tapering Fed chair powell in his july 28th Statement said the fed were looking for more progress in the labor market recovery Before it would be prepared to begin easing on that 120 billion dollars worth of monthly bond purchases Since then though we've had a lot of hawkish fed commentary None other than the vice chair richard corrida about two weeks ago commented about The timing of tapering and rate hikes in the future on this on definitely on the more hawkish side, so be interested to see what has emerged from those discussions But bear in mind they are somewhat dated given when that fed meeting occurred a few weeks ago And that is it so again if this is useful if you're new to the channel, please don't forget to subscribe Lots more content not only coming from me, but plans for eddie to do a lot of single stock analysis and other pieces as well so Yeah, i appreciate you being part of the community and i'll see you same time tomorrow. Take care