Monday, Nov. 26: Five Things Markets Are Talking About

 | Nov 26, 2018 11:21

Aside from the FAANG share liquidation to the tune of $1 trillion in face value last week, capital markets have been grappling with the expected pace of the Fed rate hikes for 2019.

A December Fed hike has already been priced in, but with weaker U.S. data and an ongoing trade war, between the world’s two largest economies, dealers are reducing their bets on a three-cycle hike from the Fed next year. Rate differentials and the liquidation of ‘frothy’ U.S. assets has not been a big support for the U.S. dollar. Investors will analyze the FOMC minutes to be released mid-week for clues to future policy.

Sterling has been the currency of danger, providing spikes of volatility with lower than usual volumes on Brexit agreements and disagreements. As of today, U.K. and EU negotiators have agreed on the text of the deal outlining the future relationship between the U.K. and the European Union. However, Prime Minister Theresa May’s work is not done yet; she still has to get parliamentarians to sign off on the deal and even her cabinet.

Elsewhere, trade tensions are heightened with the Group of 20 meeting later this week and whether the meeting will provide a venue for China and the U.S. to take steps toward resolving some of their trade issues.

While in Europe, Italy remains a cause for concern with the European Commission rejecting its budget proposal and pursuing an excessive deficit procedure (EDP), which could lead to sanctions. Rome is coming under some pressure again as the government continues to show defiance in the face of sanctions and market pressure. There is hope however, earlier this morning, the nation’s Deputy PM Matteo Salvini signalled a new openness to alter the country’s budget deficit target for next year.

Elsewhere, the dollar and Treasuries ticked lower, while oil gained and Bitcoin extended its recent tumble to below $4,000 as cryptocurrencies fell across the board.

On tap: ECB’s Mario Draghi will address the European Parliament’s committee for economic and monetary affairs this morning. Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping plan to meet at the G-20 that starts on Friday. Fed Reserve vice chairman Richard Clarida speaks in New York tomorrow and chairman Jerome Powell speaks on Wednesday. G20 meeting is to be held in Argentina from Nov. 30-Dec 1.

1. Stocks mixed overnight session

Japanese shares rallied overnight to touch a one-week high, with an upcoming World Expo in Osaka lifting the market – they won the bid to host the 2025 World Expo at the weekend. The Nikkei share average ended the session up 0.76%, posting its second session of gains. The broader Topix was up 0.2%.

Down-under, Aussie shares traded lower on Monday by heavy losses for the mining and energy sectors. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 index closed down 0.78%, after rising 0.4% on Friday. In South Korea, the KOSPI stock index jumped overnight, boosted by gains in chemical and airline stocks on oil rout. The index closed up 1.24%, its biggest gain since Nov. 2.

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China stocks shed early gains to end lower overnight as investors weighed a number of risks in the upcoming Sino-U.S trade talks, Chinese economy and global oil prices. At close, the Shanghai Composite index was down -0.1%, while the blue-chip CSI300 index was also down -0.1%.

In contrast, stocks in Hong Kong rallied on Monday, on signs of the U.S Fed slowing its pace of hiking interest rates. The Hang Seng index ended +1.73% higher and the Hang Seng China Enterprises index rose +1.3%.

In Europe, regional bourses are trading higher across the board with the majority of indices trading over 1% higher after a positive session in Asia and stronger futures in the U.S. The FTSE MIB outperforms following reports Italy is set to compromise on its budget targets.

Indices: STOXX 600 +1.3% at 358.4, FTSE +1.2% at 7032, DAX +1.2% at 11325, CAC 40 +1.4% at 5013, IBEX 35 +1.8% at 9071, FTSE MIB +3.0% at 19265, SMI (CS:SMI) +1.3% at 8962, S&P 500 Futures +1.2%