Monday, Jan. 8: Five Things Markets Are Talking About

 | Jan 08, 2018 11:18

With risk assets enjoying a strong start to the new year, the beginning of corporate earnings season is expected to dictate the next move for the stock markets.

In overnight trade, the EUR (€1.1989) and the pound (£1.3529) have retreated against the U.S. dollar, while U.S. Treasury yields have little changed in light trading, while oil trades above +$61 a barrel.

Economic data in the coming week focuses mostly on merchandise trade balances and industrial production for November and prices in the U.S.

On Tuesday, Germany releases its important manufacturing orders and industrial production data along with its merchandise trade surplus. Wednesday sees China beginning to release its monthly data with December consumer and producer prices and merchandise trade balance. While down-under, Australia reports retail sales for December late Wednesday.

Stateside this week, U.S. inflation data Thursday and Friday tops the agenda and will probably show price pressures remain muted, giving dollar ‘hawks’ no ammo to argue for a faster Fed tightening.

Also, a couple of Fed speakers should be of interest for capital markets – SF Fed President Williams and head of the N.Y. Fed Dudley are among policy makers scheduled to speak.

1. Stocks are given the green light

Both Asian and European markets have traded generally higher after Friday’s gains in the U.S.

Note: The Nikkei 225 was closed for holiday.

Down-under, Australian shares marked a 10-year peak overnight and rallied to end their fourth session higher on Monday, helped higher by financials and a positive cue from Wall Street. The S&P/ASX 200 index ended the session +0.1% higher. In Korea, the KOSPI edged higher in light trade, up +0.11%.

Note: South Korea has stepped up its currency warning – Korean Won (KRW) has weakened ahead of tomorrow’s expected talks with North Korea.

In Hong Kong, the benchmark stock indexes rallied for a 10th consecutive session overnight, aided by bullish sentiment in global equity markets, and inbound investment from the mainland. At close, the Hang Seng index was up +0.28%, while the Hang Seng China Enterprise (CEI) rose +0.19%.

In China, stocks end at a six-week high with property developers lending support. At the close, the Shanghai Composite index was up +0.54%, while the blue-chip CSI300 index was up +0.52%.

In Europe, regional indices are trading higher across the board, led by the DAX and the CAC – this follows the record closes in U.S. indices despite last Friday’s weaker non-farm payroll (NFP) report.

U.S stocks are set to open unchanged.

Indices: STOXX 600 ++0.3% at 398.3, FTSE flat at 7727, DAX +0.4% at 13374, CAC-40 +0.4% at 5491, IBEX-35 +0.2% at 10434, FTSE MIB 0.1% at 22786, SMI +0.1% at 9561, S&P 500 Futures flat

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