Tuesday, Jan. 5: Five Things Markets Are Talking About

 | Feb 05, 2019 10:07

Capital markets remain relatively listless, especially during this week in which much of Asia is on holiday. Interested parties are desperately seeking out any market momentum to apply to their convictions.

Perhaps the ‘big’ dollar may have to wait to react to this evenings State of the Union address from President Donald Trump – market focus is likely to be on any indications on how Sino-U.S. trade negotiations are going, anything positive on the trade news front should provide support for the greenback.

Until then, it’s about picking your poison – despite volatile U.S. and Euro equity and bond markets, the forex market remains confined to its recent tight trading ranges outright.

Ongoing trade tensions between the U.S. and China, rising populism, budgetary issues in Italy, French protests, monetary policy divergence, and Brexit have all being taking their toll on financial markets, except the forex space – that remains in a ‘wait and see mode.’

On tap: Corporate earnings season continues. On Wednesday, Fed Chair Jerome Powell will deliver his first public comments following last months FOMC meeting and rate decision (07:00 pm EDT).

1. Stocks driven by trade talk and earnings

Asian markets closed Tuesday: China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Korea, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan, Pakistan

In Japan, the Nikkei ended lower overnight, breaking its three-day rally as the market digested a slew of corporate earnings. The index ended 0.19% lower, while the broader Topix edged up 0.1%.

Down-under, financial equities pushed Aussie stocks to record one of their best day in years as the market saw plans of a high-powered banking inquiry as “less severe” than expected, and not posing a serious threat to one of Australia’s most profitable sector. The S&P/ASX 200 index surged 1.95% to trade atop its four-month high – the benchmark rallied 0.5% on Monday.

Note: The RBA remains in focus this week – Governor Lowe is expected to speak on Feb 6th, while the RBA quarterly statement on monetary policy seen on Feb. 8th.

In Europe, regional indices trade higher across the board, maintaining their upward momentum of late following a stronger session stateside yesterday and mixed Asian session following mixed European PMI data.

U.S. stocks are set to open in the ‘black’ (+0.12%).

Indices: STOXX 600 +0.76% at 326.66, FTSE +1.16% at 7,115.75, DAX +0.93% at 11,280.14, CAC 40 +0.80% at 5,040.26, IBEX-35 +0.66% at 9,034.25, FTSE MIB +0.99% at 19,800.50, SMI (CS:SMI) +0.82% at 9,092.50, S&P 500 Futures +0.12%