BoE Hike A Close Call

 | Aug 02, 2018 07:16AM ET

Thursday August 2: Five things the markets are talking about

The Bank of England is more likely than not to hike interest rates +25 bps to +0.75% this morning (07:00 am EDT), but this has only recently become a closer call.

June’s BoE meeting minutes showed that three out of nine MPC members voted to raise rates, opening the door wide for a hike at today’s meet – futures are pricing a +91% odds.

Note: With those odds, the danger with today’s decision is if the BoE don’t go, then sterling (£1.3080) should plummet, otherwise the priced-in hike should have a limited impact.

However, for the ‘doves’ since then, June inflation has been lower than expected, earnings growth has slipped, and political and Brexit uncertainties are very much more heightened.

For the ‘hawks,’ the UK economy continues to grow in line with, or slightly above, and employment is on the rise, two good reasons that should provide sufficient justification for a rate rise.

Elsewhere, global equities are a sea of ‘red’ ahead of the US open as President’s Trumps latest threats to free trade again has rattled markets – Trump is considering increasing proposed levies on +$200B in Chinese imports to +25% from +10%.

The ‘big’ dollar has found support, while sovereign bonds trade mixed as central banks policy decisions dominate proceedings. In commodities, oil prices touch a new two-week low on US crude inventories supply concerns, while gold prices remain choppy.

1. Stocks have little support

Global stocks are on the back foot amid heightened concerns over the escalating trade dispute between the US and China.

In Japan, equities again felt the impact from the slide in the broader Asian markets following Trump’s latest proposal on China imports. The Nikkei share average has pulled back from Wednesday’s two-week highs, as Chinese stocks fell sharply. The index ended the day down -1.03%, while the broader Topix fell -1%.

Down-under, Aussie shares slid overnight, pulled down by global miners – BHP and Rio Tinto (LON:RIO). The S&P/ASX 200 index fell -0.6%. In S. Korea, the KOSPI index also weakened on trade escalation worries. At the close, the index was down -1.6%, pressured mostly by major electronics and steel sector shares.

In China and Hong Kong, stocks extended their previous day’s losses as trade war fears, along with a Chinese vaccine scandal and signs of slowing domestic growth continue to undermine investor confidence.

At the close, the Shanghai Composite index was down -2% and the blue-chip Shanghai Shenzhen CSI 300 index fell -2.3%.

In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng index and the Hang Seng China Enterprise (CEI) both ended down -2.2%.

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In Europe, most regional bourses see red on geopolitical worries. Germany’s export-heavy DAX has already fallen -1.2% and this despite a declining EUR (€1.1617).

US stocks are set to open ‘deep’ down (-0.4%).

Indices: Stoxx50 -1.1% at 3,470, FTSE -0.8% at 7,588, DAX -1.8% at 12,516, CAC 40 -0.7% at 5,461; IBEX 35 -1.0% at 9,700, FTSE MIB -1.30% at 21,507, SMI -0.4% at 9,136, S&P 500 Futures -0.4%