Friday’s Relief Rally In Full Swing

 | Oct 12, 2018 09:16

Friday, Oct. 12: Five things the markets are talking about

Volatility, in particular, for equities, has notched aggressively higher this week, now that sovereign bond yields are beginning to price out cheap money.

Stronger than expected U.S. economic data and weak European underlying inflation in key countries is being blamed as the specific trigger for this week’s ‘bearish’ bout.

However, Chinese trade data released earlier this morning showed better-than-expected growth in Chinese exports has, at least temporarily, helped ease investor concerns about the damage to China’s economy from U.S. tariffs and other trade friction.

China’s trade surplus with the U.S. widened to a record $34.1 billion in September as exports to the American market rose by 13% y/y, despite a worsening tariff war.

Global equities have staged a robust recovery; the ‘big’ dollar trades steady, U.S. Treasury yields back up and crude oil prices recover while still heading for the biggest weekly drop in three months.

Nevertheless, a gradual Fed rate increase remains the order of the day, especially after yesterday’s muted U.S. CPI data – the market is pricing in a 25 bps move in December.

Since the Fed’s last meeting in September all data has been in line with the Fed’s depiction of an economy in which low unemployment will be coupled with inflation running near 2% for the foreseeable future.

1. Stocks sell off ends in Asia

Chinese stocks, among the biggest losers in a global market selloff this week, rallied overnight, as investors reassessed the impact of the Sino-U.S. trade spat on the country’s economy and its markets.

In Japan, the Nikkei ended higher on Friday as investors took heart from gains in Chinese equities on upbeat export data, which generated buying in manufacturers exposed to China. The Nikkei share average gained 0.5%. On Thursday, the index slid 3.9% and for the week the index was down 4.6%, its biggest weekly drop since March. The broader Topix traded flat.

Down-under, Australia’s ASX 200 lagged most of Asia Pacific overnight as the heavily weighted energy and financial sector held the index back. It ended 0.2% higher, but fell 4.7% for the week. In South Korea, its stock market rebounded from one of its biggest drops in seven-years. The KOSPI rallied 1.5%, its first gain this month. The index fell 4.7% for the week.

In China, the main stock indexes bounced higher overnight after suffering massive losses this week, as investors went bargain hunting on the back of stronger Chinese exports data. At the close, the Shanghai Composite index was 0.9% higher, after touching near four-year lows yesterday. The index was down 7.6% for the week, its worst weekly performance in eight months. The blue-chip CSI 300 index closed 1.49% higher.

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In Europe, regional indices trade higher across the board rebounding from multi-month lows following a rebound in U.S. index futures and Asian Indices.

U.S. stocks are set to open deep in the ‘black’ (+0.8%).