Wednesday, Dec. 5: Five Things Markets Are Talking About

 | Dec 05, 2018 08:31

Euro and Asian equities fell overnight, following the stateside rout Tuesday, though declines were contained. Currently, U.S. equity futures are a tad better bid after China pledged to start delivering on trade agreements reached with the U.S. last weekend in Argentina.

China’s Commerce Ministry said trade negotiations would proceed “based on a timetable” and it will swiftly execute on items where there is consensus.

Since the G20 meeting last weekend, the market has been trying to second-guess the outlook for global growth, with a percentage of the market betting that the Fed will cut interest rates as soon as 2020.

Note: U.S. equity and fixed income markets will be closed today in a mark of respect in the passing of President George H. W. Bush.

Elsewhere, sterling has slipped again, reaching a fresh 18-month low of £1.2672. During parliamentary debate on leaving the EU, which started yesterday, Prime Minister Theresa May suffered several defeats. An amendment was passed that granted members of parliament the right to have a say in future Brexit plans should May’s agreement be rejected next week.

In commodities, oil prices come under pressure again as the market waits for tomorrows critical OPEC meeting where production cuts are expected. Saudi Arabia and Russia are set to meet today for a make-or-break preparatory meeting that’s going to set the direction for the oil market.

On tap: Bank of Canada (BoC) monetary policy announcement (10:00 am EDT).

1. Equities decline contained for now

Stateside yesterday, stocks plummeted more than 3%, led lower by bank and industrial shares, as investors reacted to the inversion of parts of the U.S. yield curve with a degree of panic – the 2/5’s spread painted a worrying picture about economic growth.

In Japan, the rout continued overnight with the Nikkei falling to a fresh two-week low. The Nikkei share average dropped 0.5%, while the broader Topix also fell 0.5%.

Down-under, Aussie shares experienced a similar fate; with recession concerns and doubts about the Sino-U.S. trade talks unnerved investors. Broad-based losses pushed the benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index down 0.8% at the close. On Tuesday, the index fell 1.0%. In South Korea, stocks pared deeper declines as investors’ recalibrated expectations from cooling U.S.-China trade tensions. The Kospi was 0.6% lower at the close, led by Samsung Electronics (KS:005930), which fell 1.7%.

In China, investor doubts over whether China and the U.S. would be able to settle their trade dispute before the 90-day deadline expires shook equity prices. At the close, the blue-chip Shanghai Shenzhen CSI 300 index was down 0.5%, while the Shanghai Composite Index fell 0.6%. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng index closed 1.6%, while the China Enterprises Index lost -1.4%.

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Note: Data overnight showed that China’s services sector grew (53.8 vs. 50.7) at its quickest pace in five-months in November due to an uptick in new orders, although the outlook for businesses over the next year worsened for the third month.

In Europe, regional bourses trade lower across the board following sharp losses in the U.S yesterday and weaker Asian equities. Indices have rebounded off the lows tracking higher U.S. futures.

Indices: STOXX 600 -0.79% at 355.82, FTSE -0.95% at 6,955.72, DAX -0.79 at 11,245.29, CAC 40 -0.84% at 4,971.93, IBEX 35 -0.69% at 8,999.35, FTSE MIB -0.17% at 19,320.50, SMI (CS:SMI) -0.97% at 9,003.80, S&P 500 Futures +0.57%