Monday, Oct. 15: Five Things Markets Are Talking About

 | Oct 15, 2018 09:32

Following a weekend of warnings on global economic fragility from G10 finance leaders at an IMF meeting in Bali, global equities are starting this new week on the back foot, with regional bourses in Asia and Europe seeing red, while U.S. equity futures pointing to deep declines.

Sovereign yields are lower in this cautious climate, while the yen has pushed higher along with gold. Crude oil has advanced as tensions rise between the U.S. and Saudi Arabia over a missing journalist.

Politics and data are never a good mix, and this week is awash with both.

Italy is to submit its contentious budget to the E.C. Already, the proposed budget has potentially broken specific thresholds, which would require a lot of debating from both parties. Expect Italian BTP yields again to come under pressure, backing up towards the psychological 4%.

The E.U. meets on Wednesday and will get an update on the status of negotiations with the U.K.’s Brexit. Expect the Irish border to be the ‘hot topic du jour. If there is insufficient progress, the possibility of a special summit next month to finalize an agreement looks dead in the water. Dealers expect the pound to remain volatile in the short term.

The U.S. Treasury report about the international economy and the FX market is to be released Tuesday. To neutral observers, China does not meet the threshold of “manipulation.” However, U.S. President Donald Trump's interpretation may be very different.

On the data front, the U.S. releases retail sales today and FOMC minutes on Wednesday.

Across the pond, the U.K. presents its labour report tomorrow, (Oct. 16), inflation Wednesday (Oct. 17) and retail sales Thursday (Oct .18).

In Canada, Friday’s upcoming data includes retail sales and CPI – neither of the reports are expected to dissuade the market of pricing in a 25 bps rate hike at next week's Bank of Canada (BoC) monetary policy decision.

1. Equities see red

In Japan overnight, the Nikkei closed at a two-month low as automakers and other manufacturers were hit by news that the Trump administration would seek a provision about currency manipulation in future trade deals. The Nikkei share average ended down 1.8%, the weakest closing point since mid-Aug, while the broader Topix dropped 1.6%, the lowest close in seven months.

Down-under, the ASX 200 fell to a six-month low overnight, led by the banking sectors growing concerns about the hit to earnings from an inquiry into misconduct. The S&P/ASX 200 index fell 1%. In South Korea, the KOSPI stock index fell 0.77% as institutions cut their exposure to riskier assets. The country’s biggest automaker Hyundai Motor (KS:005380) slipped 1.7%, marking its lowest trading level in eight years.

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In China and Hong Kong, stock markets again slipped overnight following last week’s deepest dive in eight months, as investors await the latest twist in the Sino-U.S. trade dispute. The Shanghai Composite index closed lower by 1.5%, while in Hong Kong the Hang Seng closed 1.4% lower.

In Europe, regional bourses trade lower across the board, tracking U.S. futures and Asian indices lower. The FTSE and sterling (£1.3140) trade a tad lower after the E.U. and U.K. paused Brexit talks until after this week’s mini-summit.

Indices: STOXX 600 -0.6% at 356.8, FTSE -0.3% at 6976, DAX -0.4% at 11474, CAC 40 -0.6% at 5066, IBEX 35 -0.3% at 8876, FTSE MIB -0.2% at 19225, SMI (CS:SMI) % at -0.8%, S&P 500 Futures -0.8%