Thursday, June 28: Five Things Markets Are Talking About

 | Jun 28, 2018 10:23

Global equities remain on the back foot as investors continue to come to terms with the U.S. White House’s strategy towards Chinese investments. After some confusion, the Trump administration has re-established its hardline stance on trade.

The U.S. dollar has again found traction against its G10 peers, while EM currency pairs made a rough go of it in the overnight session.

U.S. Treasuries have edged lower for their first drop in more than a week, while China’s yuan fluctuated within a tighter range after its longest run of losses in years.

Note: Allowing the currency to fall is not only a sign that the PBoC is pursuing an easier policy stance but an admission of economic vulnerability.

In commodities, West Texas Intermediate crude handed back some gains after yesterday hitting the highest in more than three years.

On tap: The European economic summit begins today, while U.S. personal spending is expected to have increased for a third consecutive month tomorrow. On Saturday, China manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMI are due.

1. Stocks see ‘red’

Japan’s Nikkei closed little changed, but trades atop of its one-month low overnight, taking direction from the weakness stateside as a Sino-U.S. trade row hurts investor risk appetite. The Nikkei eased 0.1%, its weakest close this month. Meanwhile, the broader Topix dropped 0.3%, the lowest closing level since mid-April.

Down-under, Aussie stocks faded late and left the S&P/ASX 200 with a fourth consecutive slight decline. It fell 0.01% overnight, falling a cumulative 0.6% during this down streak. Weighing overnight were the financial, industrial and telecom sectors. In South Korea, the KOSPI was down 1.19%.

In Hong Kong, stocks slid to a new seven-month low overnight, as a sharp fall in the yuan added to worries about China’s economic growth amid escalating U.S.-China trade tensions. The Hang Seng index fell 1.8%, while the China Enterprises Index lost 2.2%.

In China and Hong Kong stocks again were pressured on lingering trade war fears and a depreciating yuan. The Shanghai Shenzhen CSI 300 index fell 1.2%, while the Shanghai Composite Index lost 0.5%. The Hang Sengdropped 0.6%, while the Hang Seng China Enterprise (CEI) lost 1.0%.

In Europe, regional bourses are under pressure ahead of the U.S. open. Consumer discretionary leads performers, while materials are underperforming.