Outliers from Iowa and payrolls sow confusion

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A look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike Dolan

With even the Federal Reserve meeting in the shade of Tuesday's election, markets have little to go other than last-minute opinion polls that tilt the tight White House race either way, and Iowa did just that over the weekend.

With Tokyo markets closed on Monday and trading thinner as a result, the dollar recoiled sharply from Friday's close after a Des Moines Register/Mediacom Iowa Poll on Saturday put Democrat Kamala Harris three points clear of Republican Donald Trump in a state that Trump easily won in 2016 and 2020.

The dollar index is on course for its biggest one-day drop in more than two months.

Ten-year U.S. Treasury yields fell back six basis points from Friday's close too, with related 'Trump trades' seeing Bitcoin fall back too while China's yuan and Mexico's peso firmed.

Although most elections are riven with some rogue polls and bum steers, and the lead was within margins of error, it showed a sharp reversal of a September poll showing a 4 point lead for Trump. What's more, Iowa is seen by pollsters as having a decent track record of getting the eventual result correct historically - even though it only packs six electoral college votes.

With bookmakers also lengthening odds of Republican clean sweep of Congress, the Iowa poll suggests at least that early bets on the outcome - where financial markets had been leaning toward a Trump victory in recent weeks - may prove premature.

The election stakes for the U.S. economy, world trade and geopolitics don't need re-stating at this point and markets around the globe will have at least a nervy 48 hours ahead. And with the outcome so tight in so many key swing states, there's considerable doubt about when exactly the election result will eventually be called.

All of which potentially puts Thursday's Fed decision in the context of an election result that may not yet be known - especially the outcome in Congress that will largely dictate the fiscal policy backdrop for the Fed. And gridlock at this point seems to be seen as the most likely outcome.

Futures markets seem unperturbed by the politicking and stick firmly to expectations of a quarter-point rate cut on Thursday, and another 100bps of easing in the 12 months after.

But, not unlike the Iowa poll, the Fed was thrown something of a curve ball by the October employment report on Friday. Hampered by storms and strikes, U.S. payrolls rose far less than forecast - adding just 12,000 jobs last month in the smallest gain since 2020, more than 100,000 less than expected and with prior months revised down.