Monday, June 11: Five Things Markets Are Talking About

 | Jun 11, 2018 11:28

Investors’ focus now shifts from last weekend’s disastrous G7 meeting in Canada to tomorrows Trump-Kim summit in Singapore and a plethora of major central bank rate announcements later this week.

Market mood remains cautiously ‘risk-on’ as we begin one of the busiest weeks of the calendar year. Global equities are tentatively trading in the black as sovereign bond prices fall. The EUR and Italian bonds have jumped after the country’s new finance minister over the weekend confirmed his commitment to the common currency.

Despite the market noise, investors are preparing themselves for more geopolitics to dominate this week’s market activity – Trump is somewhat confident about tomorrow’s summit with Kim Jong-Un. Mind you, he implied that in Quebec on the weekend at the G7, before his Twitter rant, which ended with deepening tensions over U.S. tariffs and saw a dispute erupt between the U.S. and Canada.

After that, investors shift their focus to a number of Tier I central banks monetary policy decisions – on Wednesday, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) is expected to hike interest rates, while the European Central Bank (ECB) officials are poised to hold the first formal talks on ending it’s bond-buying program (QE) Thursday, while the Bank of Japan (BoJ) meets early Friday, with no change to policy expected.

On tap this week: U.K. manufacturing (June 11), U.S. inflation (June 12), U.K. inflation, FOMC statement and AUD employment (June 13), U.K. retail sales, ECB rate announcement, U.S. retail sales and Bank of Japan (BoJ) rate announcement (June 14).

1. Stocks see the light

In Japan, stocks gain in thin trade as markets await the U.S.-North Korea summit. The Nikkei share average rallied 0.5%, while the broader Topix advanced 0.3%, but volume was low, with only 1b shares changing hands, the lowest level in two weeks.

Down-under, Aussie markets were closed due to a bank holiday, while in South Korea, the KOSPI rallied 0.7%.

In Hong Kong, shares rose slightly overnight, ahead of tomorrow’s historic U.S.-North Korea summit that the market hopes might pave the way for an end to the nuclear standoff on the Korean peninsula. The Hang Seng index rose 0.3%, while the Hang Seng China Enterprise (CEI) gained 0.1%.

In China, stocks closed lower for a third consecutive session overnight, on investor concerns over the liquidity conditions in the market. The Shanghai Composite Index touched its lowest level since last May before closing down 0.5%, while the blue-chip CSI 300 index was unchanged.

In Europe, Euro indexes opened broadly higher and have maintained that trend ahead of the Wall St. open. Euro financials are well-supported following assurances from Italy over the weekend that they are not interested in leaving the Euro.

Get The App
Join the millions of people who stay on top of global financial markets with Investing.com.
Download Now

U.S. stocks are set to open in the ‘black’ (+0.1%).

Indices: Stoxx50 +0.6% at 3,465, FTSE +0.8% at 7,738, DAX +0.5% at 12,834, CAC 40 +0.2% at 5,460; IBEX 35 +0.6% at 9,806, FTSE MIB +2.0% at 21,784, SMI+0.9% at 8,590, S&P 500 Futures +0.1%