Tuesday, Aug. 7: Five Things Markets Are Talking About

 | Aug 07, 2018 09:09

Most global equities found traction overnight as earnings season continues, helping support investor sentiment against a backdrop of trade worries and geopolitical concerns.

The trend for a rising U.S. dollar is taking a pause, with the dollar edging lower against G10 currency pairs. A lack of major economic data releases and a stabilizing Chinese yuan suggest a reprieve for risk assets and EM currencies today.

This week brings relatively little economic data, but investors will tune in Friday when July’s U.S. CPI is reported – a pickup in inflation could temper the dollar’s rally?

Overnight, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) held rates steady for the 21st time, a move that had been unanimously expected. Tomorrow, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) is expected to maintain its current interest rate of 1.75%.

Elsewhere, crude prices have climbed after Saudi Arabian production cuts added to market concern about tightening supplies. Gold has advanced with industrial metals.

In fixed income, euro bonds are mixed, while U.S. 10s remains range bound.

1. Stocks see the light

In Japan, the Nikkei share average gained overnight after index-heavyweight SoftBank jumped on the back of strong Q1 results, while a rebound in Chinese shares also helped market sentiment. The Nikkei ended up 0.7%, while the broader Topix rallied 0.8%.

Down-under, Aussie stocks were one of the worst performers overnight as the market was held back by a deep pullback in the materials sector. The S&P/ASX 200 fell 0.3% as BHP Billiton (LON:BLT) retreated 1.4%. In South Korea, stocks overcame some opening-hour softness to rise solidly, capped by a rally into the close. The KOSPI finished up 0.6% as index giant Samsung (KS:005930) climbed 2%.

In Hong Kong, shares ended higher as property stocks gained. Both the Hang Seng index and Hang Seng China Enterprise (CEI) rallied 1.5%.

In China, stocks rebounded overnight following a heavy four-day selloff, with infrastructure names leading the charge. The Shanghai Composite index jumped 2.7%, while the blue-chip CSI 300 index was up 2.92%, its biggest percentage jump in two years.

In Europe, regional bourses trade higher across the board following on from strong Asian Indices and positive U.S. futures.

Indices: STOXX 600 +0.6% at 391.0, FTSE +0.7% at 7719, DAX +1.0% at 12725, CAC 40 +0.9% at 5526, IBEX 35 +0.5% at 9797, FTSE MIB +1.0% at 21803, SMI (CS:SMI) +0.5% at 9193 S&P 500 Futures +0.3%