Five Things Markets Are Talking About

 | Jan 10, 2018 11:29

Global equities have taken a well-deserved pause overnight as investors access the recent surge in sovereign bond yields.

Higher global yields was always going to be one of the major trading themes for 2018, and in week-two of the new trading year, investors are having to adapt probably a tad more quicker to rates backing up. Some U.S. analysts are already calling U.S. yield curve moves a ‘bear’ market.

This morning’s Swedish Riksbank December minutes are being viewed as more ‘hawkish’ with Governor Ingves hoping to hike rates before the ECB. Even Norway’s CPI data is validating Norges view of bringing its first potential hike forward.

Last Friday’s ‘out of the ball park’ Canadian employment numbers have bond dealers repricing the possibility that Governor Stephen Poloz can afford to be more proactive on tightening. Current odds are at +83% for a +25bps hike on Jan.17.

Elsewhere, 10-year sovereign yields from the U.S., Germany, China, Japan and Korea are trading at multi-month and -year highs.

What to watch: U.S. inflation data this Thursday and Friday – will price pressures remain mute for now?

1. Equities take a breather

One day after posting more record gains stateside, global equities seem to be taking a much-needed time out.

In Japan, the Nikkei share average took a breather overnight after sharp gains; with some index-heavy stocks losing ground after the index hit a 26-year high in the previous session. The Nikkei ended -0.3% lower, while the broader Topix was up +0.2%.

Down-under, the main benchmarks in New Zealand and Australia fell -0.6%, while in South Korea the KOSPI fell -0.4% on a -3.1% drop for index heavyweight Samsung Electronics (KS:005930).

In Hong Kong, Hong Kong stocks extended their winning streak to a 12th day, again aided by strong inflows from mainland China. At the close of trade, the Hang Seng index was up +0.2%, while the Hang Seng China Enterprises index rose +0.27%.

In China, stocks gain for the ninth day as banks and consumer firms rally. At the close, the Shanghai Composite index was up +0.24%, while the blue-chip CSI300 index was up +0.45%.

Note: China’s producer prices rose at their slowest pace in a year in December, while the country’s consumer inflation accelerated less than expected to +1.8%last month from +1.7% in November.

In Europe, regional markets opened slightly lower, but have bounced from their lows with some mixed results. Oil prices continue to support energy stocks. Elsewhere, market attention is turning to upcoming inflation data from the U.S and corporate earnings stateside.

Futures on the S&P 500 Index have decreased -0.2%, the first retreat in more than a week.

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Indices: Stoxx600 -0.1% at 399.6, FTSE +0.3% at 7752, DAX -0.5% at 13320, CAC-40 -0.1% at 5520, IBEX-35 +0.4% at 10468, FTSE MIB +0.4% at 23095, SMI -0.3% at 9587, S&P 500 Futures -0.2%