Monday, May 13: Five Things Markets Are Talking About

 | May 13, 2019 08:46

This week begins again with global equity markets on the back foot, sovereign debt in demand, and the risk averse go-to positioning investors primary trade. Bets on a Fed rate cut are also now gaining momentum.

Currently, the U.S. and China remain some distance away from agreeing any kind of trade deal. While waiting for China’s retaliatory counter punch, it seems more obvious than before, any short-term prospect of a deal occurring is a figment of one’s imagination.

On the data front, it’s an intense packed calendar from Tuesday to Thursday, starting with Germany’s CPI where strength is expected, followed by the UK’s labour market report and Eurozone industrial production (May 14). The mid-week session will be focused on China, which will release fixed asset investment, industrial production and also retail sales data for April. Next up, German GDP, as well as U.S. retail sales and U.S. industrial production, both of which are expected to show a mix of flat to respectable results. Thursday’s U.S. manufacturing report from the Philadelphia Fed could show some clues on U.S. tariff actions.

On tap: GBP average earnings index & AUD wage price index (May 14), CAD CPI, U.S. retail sales & AUD employment change (May 15), AUD Parliamentary Elections (May 17).

1. Stocks slow burn lower

Capital markets are bracing itself for the promised ‘counter-measures’ from China in retaliation for President Donald Trump’s tariff increase late last week on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods.

In Japan, the Nikkei saw red as most cyclical sectors lost ground after the Sino-U.S. trade war escalated. The Nikkei share average ended 0.7% lower, the lowest closing since March 28, while the broader Topix shed another 0.5%.

Note: In 2018, equity losses were sharper when Trump first imposed tariffs on imports from China.

Down-under, Aussie shares ended lower overnight, pressured by disappointing bank earnings, although losses were offset by gains in health care and gold stocks. The S&P/ASX 200 index closed down 0.2%. The benchmark rose 0.3% on Friday. In South Korea, the KOSPI index (-1.38%) closed out at its lowest since Jan. 15 on anxiety over whether Washington and Beijing could make headway in their trade talks.

In China, shares tumbled, with the benchmark Shanghai Composite and the blue-chip CSI 300 shedding 1.3% and 1.8%, respectively, while in Hong Kong, financial markets were closed for a bank holiday.

In Europe, regional bourses trade lower across the board tracking sharply lower U.S. indices and weaker Asian indices as trade tensions continue.

Indices: Stoxx600 -0.63% at 375.14, FTSE -0.05% at 7,199.89, DAX -0.78% at 11,966.36, CAC 40 -0.51% at 5,300.30, IBEX 35 -0.27% at 9,092.44, FTSE MIB -0.77% at 20,714.50, SMI (CS:SMI) -0.64% at 9,412.50, S&P 500 Futures -1.23%

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