Monday, March 26: Five Things Markets Are Talking About

 | Mar 26, 2018 09:03

There are some tentative signs that investor fears of an escalation of trade tensions are beginning to ease. A rebound in global equities overnight is offering the market some optimism of stabilization after last week’s rout.

Global sovereign yields have also backed up, whilst the safe-haven yen (¥105.00) has slipped back from last weeks strongest print in more than 18 months and gold has trimmed some of last Friday’s advance.

In this holiday shortened trading week there are a number of key releases with final Q4 GDP’s being released in France, the U.K. and the U.S.

Elsewhere, for February, Japan will post its industrial production (IP), unemployment, retail sales and consumer prices.

There are no central bank meetings scheduled for this week. In Europe, the March EC business and consumer confidence survey – important to the European Central Bank (ECB) – will be released.

Stateside on Thursday, U.S personal income and spending data for February are due to be released.

1. Global equities rebound

In Japan, stocks have rebounded from near-six-month intraday lows to finish strongly higher thanks to a roughly +0.5% pullback for the yen against some major global currencies. Overnight, the Nikkei finished at session highs in rising +0.7% – it was down -1.3% soon after the open. Despite concerns about U.S./China trade conflicts, buyers stepped in following the Nikkei’s -4.5% collapse Friday.

Down-under, the Aussie ASX 200 closed at more than five-month low on Monday, down -0.5%, mirroring States-side losses amid lingering fears a potential U.S./China trade war could hurt global growth and corporate earnings. In South Korea, stocks rebounded strongly after first-hour weakness, with the market ultimately finishing at session highs. The KOSPI rallied +0.8%, supported by chip firms Samsung (KS:005930) and SK Hynix up +1.1%.

In Hong Kong, stocks reversed earlier losses to end higher overnight, as trade war worries eased after reports the U.S. and China commenced talks to improve U.S. access to Chinese markets. At close of trade, the Hang Seng index was up +0.79%, while the Hang Seng China Enterprise Index (CEI) rose +0.57%.

In China, a last-hour burst of buying in Chinese stocks, which had already rebounded from morning lows, helped the market look much better after Friday’s trade-fuelled slide. The Shenzhen Composite finished with a +1.3% gain after falling -2.3% earlier. However, ‘big caps’ remained down for the day, with the Shanghai Composite falling for a fourth consecutive session, declining -0.6%.

In Europe, regional indices trade mostly higher across the board recovering from early weakness following a rebound in U.S. equity futures after a sharp selloff on Friday.

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U.S. stocks are set to open deep in the ‘black’ (+1.1%).

Indices: STOXX 600 +04% at 367.1, FTSE +0.4% at 6946, DAX +0.6% at 11955, CAC 40 +0.4% at 5113, IBEX 35 +0.1% at 9405, FTSE MIB -0.3% at 22226, SMI +0.8% at 8634, S&P 500 Futures +1.1%