Monday, Dec. 11: Five Things The Markets Are Talking About

 | Dec 11, 2017 09:49

Central Banks will again dominate proceedings this week while economic data is on the thin side.

Within in the G10, four central banks meet this coming week, including the Fed, the Bank of England (BoE), Swiss National Bank (SNB) and Norway’s Norges bank.

Only the Fed is expected to change its interest rate on Wednesday (2 p.m. EDT) after last Friday’s non-farm payroll (NFP) report showed robust job growth, supporting U.S. economic conditions and a solid labor market that policy makers hope will eventually “fan inflation.” Fixed income traders have priced in a +25 bps hike in the fed funds to +1.5%.

On Thursday, the market is anticipating the ECB (07:45 a.m. EDT) to divulge details of how it will begin to taper its monthly asset purchases (QE) beginning in the new year. While the BoE (07:00 a.m. EDT) is widely expected to keep its key rate on hold after last month's increase.

Also this week, among the top U.S. economic reports are consumer inflation on Wednesday and retail sales on Thursday. While in Europe, lawmakers continue to debate Brexit and weigh moves on the next step, while NAFTA negotiators meet again.

Elsewhere, in Japan, the Q4 Tankan survey will be monitored closely especially after the healthy revised Q3 GDP estimate, while in the U.K., the November labor market report dominates Wednesday.

1. Stocks grind higher

Ahead of the U.S. open, Euro equities are following their Asian counterparts higher, after another record close in the U.S. on Friday.

In Japan, stocks hit a fresh 25-year high overnight in choppy trade as gains in financial shares and large cap stocks offset falls in real estate and construction companies. The Nikkei share average ended +0.6% higher, while the broader Topix gained +0.5%.

Down-under, Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 rallied less than +0.1% despite gains in commodity stocks as most bank majors pulled back. In South Korea, the Kospi closed out little changed.

In Hong Kong, stocks rose the most in nearly three-weeks overnight, as index heavyweight Tencent (telecommunication conglomerate) rebounded for the third consecutive session. At close of trade, the Hang Seng index was up +1.14%, while the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index rose +1.26%.

In China, stocks rebound as Beijing considers impact of new asset management rules. The Shanghai Composite index was up +0.98%, while the blue-chip CSI300 index was up +1.65%.

Note: Chinese equities plummeted in November after Beijing issued draft guidelines to tighten rules on the asset management industry, in its latest step to fend off ‘systemic risks’ from the country’s growing shadow banking sector.

In Europe, regional indices are off their highs and trading mixed, with the exception of notable strength in the FTSE100 trading higher by over +0.5%.

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U.S. stocks are set to open in the black (+0.1%).

Indices: STOXX 600 flat at 389.3, FTSE +0.6% at 7438, DAX +0.1% at 13162, CAC-40 flat at 5400, IBEX-35 -0.2% at 10306, FTSE MIB -0.2% at 22736, SMI flat at 9322, S&P 500 Futures +0.1%