EQUITIES: Bull Cycle in E-Mini S&P Intact, Contract Still Above 20-, 50-Day EMAs

Dec-10 09:58

A bull cycle in Eurostoxx 50 futures remains intact and the contract is trading closer to its recent highs. Price has cleared the 20- and 50-day EMAs, signalling scope for a stronger recovery. Sights are on 5742.40 next (pierced), 76.4% of the Nov 13 - 21 bear leg. A clear breach of this price point would pave the way for an extension towards 5825.00, the Nov 13 high and a key resistance. First key support to watch lies at 5629.92, the 50-day EMA. A bull cycle in S&P E-Minis remains intact and price continues to trade above the 20- and 50- day EMAs. Note that recent gains signal the likely end of the corrective cycle between Oct 30 and Nov 21. A continuation higher would highlight potential for a move towards the key resistance and bull trigger at 6953.75, the Oct 30 high. Key support lies at 6525.00, the Nov 21 low. First support is at 6807.02, the 20-day EMA.

  • Japan's NIKKEI closed lower by 52.3 pts or -0.1% at 50602.8 and the TOPIX ended 4.1 pts higher or +0.12% at 3389.02.
  • Elsewhere, in China the SHANGHAI closed lower by 9.025 pts or -0.23% at 3900.496 and the HANG SENG ended 106.55 pts higher or +0.42% at 25540.78.
  • Across Europe, Germany's DAX trades lower by 86.4 pts or -0.36% at 24076.12, FTSE 100 higher by 11.71 pts or +0.12% at 9653.42, CAC 40 down 20.87 pts or -0.26% at 8032.16 and Euro Stoxx 50 down 9.49 pts or -0.17% at 5709.02.
  • Dow Jones mini up 9 pts or +0.02% at 47622, S&P 500 mini up 4.25 pts or +0.06% at 6852.5, NASDAQ mini up 6.75 pts or +0.03% at 25706.5.

Historical bullets

SONIA OPTIONS: SFIH6 96.25/35/65/75 Call Condor Lifted

Nov-10 09:46

SFIH6 96.25/35/65/75 call condor paper paid 5.75 on 5K.

BONDS: Gilt/Bunds Above 180bp, Goldman Recommend Long In Gilts

Nov-10 09:36

Gilt/Bunds slightly wider on the day, out to 180.5bp after failing to hold a break below 175bp last week.

  • We noted that room for gilt outperformance (from a tactical perspective) had narrowed ahead of last week’s BoE decision but did flag some potential medium-term drivers of gilt outperformance vs. German paper (a dovish BoE outcome, various possible fiscal measures and a reduction in gilt issuance).
  • UK paper hasn’t manged to benefit from the dovish hold that the Bank delivered as of yet, taking cues from wider sentiment in the times since.
  • However, Goldman Sachs have recommended entering Gilt/Bund tighteners at 180bp (target 140bp, stop 205bp).
  • They note they “think the MPC’s message was gilt supportive. Our economists now expect a cut in December, and three further cuts by the July meeting as disinflationary pressure gains strength. For the time being, focus will shift back to the Autumn budget, which we expect will add fiscal drag and reinforce disinflation, which is set to drive inflation differentiation vs. Europe”.
  • Goldman also expect this recommendation to garner support from the supply picture, arguing that “gross gilt issuance needs are below those of Germany in 2026. We also note that the sharp increase in pickup of BoE repo facilities may strengthen the argument for slowing down QT”.

US: Centrist Democrats Break w/Leadership To Reopen Govt, Secure Small Wins

Nov-10 09:23

Eight centrist Democrats yesterday took the first step toward reopening the government, voting with Republicans on a new Continuing Resolution to fund the US government through January 30. The package provides backpay to furloughed federal workers and includes a three-bill Fiscal 2026 appropriations package covering Agriculture, Rural Development, and FDA, Military Construction and Veterans Affairs, and Legislative Branch.

  • The deal includes a commitment for a Senate vote in December on renewing the expiring ACA tax credits, but as it does not include a commitment from President Donald Trump or House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA), it is unlikely to pass, especially considering Trump’s recent activity on social media decrying the ACA as a ‘scam’.
  • Senate Republican leadership are eying final passage today, but Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) is unlikely to provide the votes to fast-track the process. The government is likely to be reopened on Wednesday, at the earliest. Punchbowl points out that none of the Democrats who voted 'yes' are up for re-election in 2026, insulating them from blowback from progressives.
  • The deal fails to achieve Democrats’ core demand of an extension to Affordable Care Act subsidies, but does secure small wins with a promise to backpay federal workers, resume withheld federal payments to states, and a provision to reverse federal layoffs made during the shutdown.
  • Democrats will also claim a win by fully funding Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), although as the programme is funded via mandatory spending in the Department of Agriculture’s annual spending bill, it wasn’t at risk of being cut.