Monday, June 25: Five Things Markets Are Talking About

 | Jun 25, 2018 09:06

Global stocks remain under pressure, as investors continues to analyze the impact of a trade spat between the world’s two largest economies – U.S. and China.

Markets are beginning to get very nervous by the prospect of a full-blown trade war, and this despite the tariffs so far announced by the U.S. administration, and China’s retaliatory measures, amount only to a small amount of goods. It’s the contagion effect to other major economies that the markets are really worried about.

In China overnight, the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) sent a strong signal of policy easing by cutting their reserve requirement ratio (RRR) by -50 bps (as expected), to free up fresh liquidity for the real economy. This move may also fuel trade tensions between the U.S. and China. The cut comes into effect July 5, one day before the first round of U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods begin.

Elsewhere, the Turkish lira (TRY) temporally surged after Recep Tayyip Erdogan claimed victory in this weekend’s Turkish presidential election.

On tap: The RBNZ meets on Thursday and a ‘dovish’ message is expected. Stateside, U.S. consumer confidence (June 26), U.S. durable goods and U.S final GDP (June 28) should provide some interest for investors.

In the U.K. and Canada, GDP data unfolds, while in Japan, retail sales, the unemployment rate and industrial production will peek markets interest.

1. Stocks see red

Equities in Asia led the retreat overnight in the wake of reports that the Trump administration is preparing new curbs on Chinese investments.

In Japan, the Nikkei share average dropped as sellers targeted large caps as well as defensive stocks, while the mining sector outperformed after oil prices jumped on Friday. A stronger yen also fuelled the selling pressure. The Nikkei fell 0.8%, extending the weekly drop of 1.6% in the past week. The broader Topix dropped 1%.

Down-under, a pullback in financials helped keep Australia’s stock indexes lower, but the S&P/ASX 200 continued to outperform. It fell 0.2% to notch a second consecutive modest drop. In South Korea, the KOSPI closed higher, up 0.3%.

In Hong Kong, stocks touched a six-month low as the U.S. plans China tech investment limits. The Hang Seng index fell 1.3%, while the Hang Seng China Enterprise (CEI) lost 1.2%.

Note: The U.S. is drafting plans that would block firms with at least 25% Chinese ownership from buying U.S. companies with “industrially significant technology.

In China, stocks reversed early gains to close lower overnight, as an expected RRR cut was largely offset by lingering trade war fears. The blue-chip Shanghai Shenzhen CSI 300 index fell 1.3%, while the Shanghai Composite Index slid 1.1%.

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In Europe, stocks have opened lower as trade concerns continue to weigh on risk sentiment. A coalition disagreement in Germany is also leading to investor concerns.

Indices: STOXX 600 -0.8% at 381, FTSE -0.8% at 7619, DAX -1.0% at 12456, CAC 40 -0.8% at 5347; IBEX 35 -1.0% at 9689, FTSE MIB -1.2% at 21621, SMI (CS:SMI) -0.9% at 8539, S&P 500 Futures -0.6%