Five things the markets are talking about Monday, Nov. 20

 | Nov 20, 2017 10:45

The collapse of the German coalition talks over the weekend would suggest that Germany is no longer the role model of political stability. Europe’s strongest economy has the possibility of three options ahead, a minority government, a continuation of the current grand coalition or new elections.

The EUR (€1.1795) has recovered to last trade up +0.68% outright having earlier dropped to its lowest in nearly a week at €1.1723 as the market reassessed how bad it is that Chancellor Angela Merkel failed to form a coalition.

The majority expected a coalition to happen and the most probable scenario now is for Merkel to form a minority government with the FDP.

Note: Trading volumes are expected to be lower than average this week due to the Thanksgiving holiday in the U.S.

The week ahead, key data are the flash November PMIs in Europe (Nov. 23), Japan and the U.S. Germany posts updated Q3 GDP and the important November Ifo survey (Nov. 24). From Japan, key October merchandise trade data (Nov 24) will also be reported.

Minutes from the Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) November meeting are due Tuesday (Nov. 21), while those from the ECB’s October meeting due out on Thursday (Nov. 23) could show dissent in the discussion about tapering.

The U.K. announces its budget Wednesday (Nov 23); that could see a significant economic downgrade amid a continued impasse in its negotiations with the E.U on Brexit.

Also on Wednesday, the Fed will publish the minute’s form its November meeting (2 p.m. EST). There will be more clues on where certain policy makers stand regarding inflation, but the market is still pricing in a +99% probability of a U.S. rate hike next month.

Note: Fedspeak will not be a feature of the week as no speakers are scheduled.

1. Stocks mixed results

In Japan, the Nikkei share average fell overnight amid losses stateside and a stronger yen (¥112.00), while semiconductor equipment manufacturers and financial stocks underperformed. The Nikkei ended -0.6%, while the broader Topix slipped -0.2%. Turnover also dropped to a one-month low.

Down-under, Australia’s stock benchmark was pressured overnight by a pullback in the country’s major banks after late-week gains. After rising the last two sessions, the S&P/ASX 200 settled down -0.2%.

In Hong Kong, stocks rose slightly overnight. The Hang Seng index rose +0.2%, and the Hang Seng China Enterprise (CEI) lost -0.6%.

In China, stocks reversed early losses to end higher on Monday, aided by a rebound in banking shares even after Beijing set new guidelines to regulate asset management products. The blue-chip CSI300 index dropped as much as -1.5% in early trade but closed up +0.6%, while the Shanghai Composite Index ended -0.3% higher.

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In Europe, regional equities opened lower, but turned around after digesting situation in Germany. Energy stocks are supported by oil prices, but commodity prices are underperforming, but not enough to significantly impact material stocks.

U.S stocks are set to open in the ‘red’ (-0.2%).

Indices: Stoxx50 -0.1% at 3,545, FTSE -0.2% at 7,366, DAX -02% at 12,970, CAC-40 flat at 5,320, IBEX-35 +0.1% at 10,019, FTSE MIB flat at 22,086, SMI +0.6% at 9,236, S&P 500 Futures -0.2%