Noise beat signal overnight, but the FOMC minutes continue to echo in investor ears and risks going forward. The Fed has a number of members who are aiming high like archers seeking the perfect trajectory, writes Bob Savage Thursday.

The odds of three hikes in 2019 to 3% rose after the release to 30%. This has supported the U.S. dollar (USD), hit risk moods and led to a renewed thinking about bond yields.

Of course, the actual arrows being shot by others are still painful and add to the mixed view for today – as UK Brexit headlines show a deadlock but PM May aims high for a deal with perhaps a delay.

The Italy and EU budget row didn’t find much comfort despite a Merkel meeting.

The Saudi issue with journalist Khashoggi gets worse with the Turkish tapes and the U.S. trade spats with China and the EU are ongoing. The price action in China shares dominated Asia with the near 3% drop adding to tomorrow’s GDP doubts and the drift lower in Chinese yen (CNY) after the U.S. Treasury didn’t label China a currency manipulator doesn’t look like a coincidence.

On the economic front, overnight the data missed the target – the Japan trade data are troubling for the notable drop in exports – worst in two years – while the Australian jobs were strong enough to keep unemployment at six-year lows but with no real inflation and with lower participation.

The UK retail sales missed the mark and highlight the role of discounting at brick and mortar stores over the internet. Everyone loves a bargain. Investors do as well and so the buying of the dip mentality won’t go away even with some of the Fed aiming high on rates.

The risk barometer for today rests with the USD as it’s the stuff holding back 3Q earnings from even better profits if you listen to the calls. USD 95-96 trading is a dangerous flag with risk of 96 breakouts for 97 should U.S. rates go even higher.

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