Appetite For Market Risk Is Very Low

 | Jan 22, 2019 06:38AM ET

Tuesday January 22: Five things the markets are talking about

Appetite for risk in this holiday shorted week starts on the low side with European and Asia equities under pressure in their respective sessions, along with U.S futures, as an uncertain outlook for global trade and growth continues to inhibit investor appetite.

Data on the weekend showed that the world’s second largest economy, China, grew at its slowest pace (+6.6% y/y) in nearly three-decades in 2018, while yesterday, the IMF cut its forecasts for global economic growth this year to +3.5% from October’s +3.7% and from the +3.9% it had expected last July. They indicated that “global expansion has weakened,” dragged down by poor performance in Europe and some emerging markets. However, data stateside is beginning to be pressured by the Sino-U.S trade dispute and the ongoing partial U.S government shutdown.

The U.S dollar remains better bid for a sixth consecutive session as the go-to safe haven currency pair, while U.S Treasuries and euro sovereign yields fall. Despite Brexit uncertainty outcomes, sterling, for the time being, remains contained after U.K PM Theresa May indicated yesterday that she will seek changes to the Irish border backstop to address parliament’s worries. She also added that “Brexit negotiations won’t be delayed and that there won’t be a second Brexit referendum.”

On Tap: U.S. earnings season remains in full swing, the Bank of Japan (BoJ) meet later this evening, which European Central Bank (ECB) monetary committee meets Thursday. Davos day 1 begins this morning.

1. Stocks dip on global growth worries

In Japan, the Nikkei edged lower overnight, retreating from a one-month high print Monday as investors took profits from recent gainers amid concerns about slowing economic growth. The index shed -0.47%, after Monday’s record print, while the broader Topix lost -0.6%.

Down-under, Aussie shares ended a five-day rally on weak financials and mining stocks. The S&P/ASX 200 index fell -0.5%. The benchmark rallied +0.2% on Monday. In S. Korea, the Kospi stock index closed weaker as data showed weakening exports had hit last year’s annual pace of growth to a six-year low, while global growth worries darkened investor outlook. At the close, the index ended down -0.32%.

In China, equities fell overnight as investors braced for a tough start to the New Year amid weak economic outlook domestically and abroad. At the close, the Shanghai Composite index fell -1.2%, while the blue-chip CSI300 index fell -1.3%. In Hong Kong, it was a similar story, at the close of trade, the Hang Seng index was down -0.7% and in line with a broad retreat across the region as profit-takers took control.

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In Europe, regional bourses trade lower, following a negative session in Asia and negative U.S futures as macro developments remain in focus.

U.S stocks are set to open in the ‘red’ (-0.6%).

Indices: Stoxx600 -0.12% at 355.92, FTSE -0.46% at 6,938.73, DAX -0.22% at 11,111.49, CAC-40 -0.30% at 4,853.01, IBEX-35 -0.14% at 9,041.00, FTSE MIB -0.51% at 19,538.50, SMI -0.28% at 8,994.20, S&P 500 Futures -0.60%