Risk Slumps After Trump’s Trade Threats

 | May 06, 2019 09:32

Monday, May 6: Five things the markets are talking about

The latest U.S. jobs report showed that hiring picked up in April, with the unemployment rate falling to its lowest level in 50 years. It gave a boost to major U.S. stock indexes and weighed on the mighty U.S. dollar and 10-year Treasury yields.

Nevertheless, a couple of tweets from U.S. President Donald Trump over the weekend has managed to put global equities on the back foot, pressured Treasury yields even further and has investors seeking shelter by owning risk averse currencies.

Trump is threatening to increase tariffs on Chinese imports – he planned to increase taxes on $200 billion in Chinese imports to 25% from 10% starting Friday. He also plans 25% tariffs “shortly” on a further $325 billion in Chinese goods – his threats are calling into question whether the next round of trade talks this week will be delayed.

Note: Chinese Vice-Premier Liu He is scheduled to arrive in Washington this Wednesday.

On the data front, Eurozone retail sales will start the week followed by German manufacturers’ orders and French merchandise trade. In the U.K., first-quarter GDP will be posted Friday. Down-under, Aussie trade and retail sales data will be posted early in the week followed by mid-week policy announcement from the RBA amid expectations for no action. The RBNZ will also be issuing a statement this week. Chinese CPI data are also expected mid-week.

Stateside, inflation will be the focus, but it will be late in the week, first producer prices on Thursday then a consumer price report on Friday that is not expected to show much acceleration. For Canada, housing starts will be posted on Wednesday, the trade balance on Thursday, and the labour force survey on Friday where a gain is expected.

On tap: JPY & GBP bank holiday, AUD retail sales and NZD (May 6), RBA & RBNZ monetary policy announcement (May 7), Fr. Bank holiday & NZD annual budget (May 8), CAD Trade balance & U.S PPI, RBA monetary policy statement (May 9), GBP GDP & CAD employment change (May 10).

1. Stocks in deep red

Global equities have plunged after the sudden intensification of Sino-U.S. trade tensions, sowing fears the conflict could spill over into slower economic growth.

In Asia, both the Nikkei225 and the Kospi index were closed for a bank holiday. In Europe, the U.K. was closed for the long weekend.

Down-under, Aussie shares closed atop a three-week low overnight after U.S’s threat to raise tariffs on Chinese goods spoiled hopes for an imminent trade deal between the world’s largest economies. Broad-based losses pushed the S&P/ASX 200 index 0.8% lower at the close of trade. The benchmark was little changed on Friday.

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In China, investors were caught off guard by Trump’s tariff threats, but managed to dump equities and sell the yuan currency as a fresh deterioration in Sino-U.S. trade tensions began. Regional bourses fell the most in more than three-years. The blue-chip CSI300 index and the Shanghai Composite Index both tumbled more than -5%. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng index slumped -3.3%.

In Europe, regional indexes trade sharply lower across the board as U.S trade tensions weighs.

In the U.S., stocks are set to open deep in the ‘red’ (-1.8%).

Indices: STOXX 600 -1.54% at 384.34, DAX -2.13% at 12,148.00, CAC 40 -2.21% at 5,426.01, IBEX 35 -1.75% at 9,245.00, FTSE MIB -2.38% at 21,249.50, SMI -1.65% at 9,581.60, S&P 500 Futures -1.86%