Tariff Man Has Risk Doubters Seeking Shelter

 | May 07, 2019 09:29

Tuesday, May 7: Five things the markets are talking about

Global equities were mixed overnight as a slew of trade headlines continued to batter markets. U.S. Treasury yields have managed to back up a tad while the U.S. dollar confines itself to “non-volatile” trading range against G10 currency pairs.

Nevertheless, investor sentiment remains tenuous as President Donald Trump’s latest threat to raise tariffs on Chinese goods this Friday from 10 to 25% has certainly shocked financial markets and fuelled worries that this week’s trade talks may be derailed. China’s Vice Premier Liu He has indicated that he and a delegation would still visit the U.S. for trade talks on May 9 and 10.

Down-under, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) left rates on hold, defying expectations it could become the first G10 central bank to enter an easing cycle. The emphasis now shifts to Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) later this evening. The market is pricing in a roughly a 50% chance of one. If it happens, expect the NZD to pullback towards its seven-month lows of NZ$ $0.6425.

On tap: China releases trade data this evening, and the U.S. does so on Thursday. South Africa holds national elections tomorrow while China reports on inflation Thursday and the U.S. releases their April CPI report Friday.

1. Stocks pare their Sino-U.S. tariff losses

In Asia, the Nikkei was the biggest loser as domestic markets reopened following 10 days of holidays. Missing out on Trump’s tariff threats to China, the Nikkei closed down 1.5% as 27 of the 33 Topix sectors fell. Some electronics and machinery stocks saw big declines on weak guidance issued ahead of the holiday.

Down-under, Australian stocks lost most of their gains after the RBA declined to cut interest rates to help support a ‘slowing’ domestic economy. It was an even split on a cut, but after rising as much as 0.9% intraday, the benchmark ASX 200 stock index ended with just a 0.2% gain. In South Korea, the KOSPI was down 0.88%, however, after North Korea conducted a round of missile tests on Saturday.

In China, equities staged a “mild technical rebound” but remained volatile after their worst drop in more than 36 months yesterday. The benchmark Shanghai Composite was 0.7% higher, while the blue-chip CSI 300 rose 0.98%. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng was up 0.5%.

In Europe, regional bourses are trading mixed, paring earlier highs, following a generally higher session in Asia after China’s Vice Premier Liu said he will visit the U.S. this week for trade talks.

U.S stocks are set to open in the ‘red’ (-0.46%).

Indices: Stoxx600 -0.18% at 386.20, FTSE -0.58% at 7,338.05, DAX -0.30% at 12,250.30, CAC-40 -0.44% at 5,459.56, IBEX-35 +0.20% at 9,350.10, FTSE MIB +0.27% at 21,466.50, SMI -0.10% at 9,648.50, S&P 500 Futures -0.46%

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