Monday, April 29: Five Things Markets Are Talking About

 | Apr 29, 2019 06:15

Global equites are mixed at the start of this data laden and holiday interrupted week. The ‘big’ dollar is trading steady and Treasury yields have ticked a tad higher as investors wait for further clues on global growth with a plethora of data out from the U.S., Europe and China.

Note: Markets in Japan remain closed for Golden Week, with a number of other countries set to follow suit on May 1 (CNY, CHF, GER. Fr. & ITL).

Stateside starts with the Fed’s favourite inflation reports today (U.S. PCE). Any further softness would have investors increasing their bets on a Fed interest rate cut this year – futures are currently pricing in a 50% odds for the Fed to cut this September.

For many, the big event this week will be U.S. Federal Reserve monetary policy meeting, its interest rate announcement and in particular, Chair Jerome Powell's press conference – will he be standing by his recent ‘dovish’ outlook?

Elsewhere, the China’s Caixin PMI then follows for a second update on Chinese manufacturing, along with German retail sales (May 1) as well as the latest Bank of England interest rate announcement (May 2) – Brexit seems to be temporarily on the back burner.

On Friday, U.S. non-farm payrolls (NFP) is expected to round off the week with another solid report.

On the Sino-U.S. trade front, Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin announced last week that they will travel to Beijing for trade talks beginning on April 30.

On tap: ANZ Business confidence (Apr 29), CAD GDP, consumer confidence & NZD employment change (Apr 30), Bank holiday – CNY, CHF, GER. Fr. & ITL, U.S ISM manufacturing PMI, FOMC monetary policy statement & CNY Caixin manufacturing PMI (May 1), U.K. inflation report, BoE monetary policy statement & AUD building approvals (May 2), non-farm payroll (May 3).

1. Some stocks get the green light

On the whole, global equities are starting the week better after strong U.S. Q1 economic growth, coupled with data showing profits at Chinese industrial firms grew for the first time in four months.

Note: Tokyo’s Nikkei was closed for a public holiday.

Down-under, Aussie Australian shares ended lower on Monday after losses in financial stocks pulled the benchmark down from its 12-year high as investors remained cautious ahead of bank earnings. The S&P/ASX 200 index closed down 0.4%, breaking its four consecutive days of gains. The benchmark gained 0.1% to close at its highest level since December 2007. In South Korea, the KOSPI index closed out up 1.7%.

In China, the blue-chip rose +0.3%, while the Shanghai Composite Index closed down 0.7%. Both indexes on Friday posted their worst weekly drop in 28 on policy support worries.

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Note: Data on the weekend showed that profit at China’s industrial firms grew last month, rebounding from four months of contraction.

In Hong Kong, indexes followed suit, the Hang Seng index rose 1.0%, while the Hang Seng China Enterprise (CEI) gained 1.1% on stronger U.S. and China data.

In Europe, regional bourses trade mostly lower on the open following a mixed session in Asia and slightly higher U.S. Index futures. The Spanish IBEX 35 is underperforming following the Spanish General Elections (see below) over the weekend.

Indices: STOXX 600 -0.03% at 390.74, FTSE -0.06% at 7,423.50, DAX -0.10% at 12,302.99, CAC 40 -0.01% at 5,569.11, IBEX-35 -0.59% at 9,450.27, FTSE MIB +0.18% at 21,776.50, SMI (CS:SMI) -0.02% at 9,722.00, S&P 500 Futures +0.08%