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 | Mar 11, 2019 06:53AM ET

Monday, March 11: Five things the markets are talking about

A U.S budget, a ‘meaningful’ Brexit vote and U.S-China trade talks are to dominate proceedings this week.

President Trump is expected to release his proposed fiscal 2020 budget today, four-weeks later than scheduled, due to his partial government shutdown. Expect the President to be looking for more money to build his wall.

We are 24-hours away from PM May’s supposed ‘meaningful’ Brexit vote and the rumor is that Ms. May could lose this vote by a wider margin than the last one. Britain is scheduled to exit the E.U in just 20-days. As expected, sterling remains volatile.

On the trade front, China and the U.S are said to be in general agreement “on many crucial issues and have held meaningful discussions on foreign exchange,” according to the PBoC.

In an interview last night, Fed Chair Powell indicated that he is in no hurry to change interest rates and acknowledged that over the past few months there’s been increasing evidence of the global economy slowing down. Equities traded mostly higher overnight following their worst week for three months. Sovereign yields trade atop of their lows, while ‘big’ dollar trades steady.

On tap: A slew of data from China this week (retail sales, investment, credit, and industrial production) is expected to give the market a fresh insight on the impact of the monetary stimulus. The BoJ will also meet to set policy. This morning, its U.S retail sales (0:8:30 am EDT).

1. Stocks rise to start the week

Global stocks are climbing at the start of the week, after reassuring comments from Fed Chair Powell and on signs that the U.S and China are nearing a trade deal.

In Japan, the Nikkei share average snapped a four-session losing streak overnight, although gains were limited as much weaker-than-expected U.S jobs report reduced the outlook for the global economy. The Nikkei ended the day up +0.47%, while the broader climbed +0.57%.

Down-under, Aussie shares ended lower overnight, led by financial and energy stocks, after last week’s downbeat data stateside increased global concerns about an economic slowdown. The S&P/ASX 200 index dipped -0.4% at the close of trade. The benchmark fell -1% on Friday. In S. Korea, the KOSPI stock index ended flat, tracking the rebound in China stock markets on Chinese stimulus hopes.

In China, stocks rebounded overnight, after suffering heavy losses on Friday, after the PBoC governor pledged more support for a slowing economy. At the close, the Shanghai Composite index closed up +1.92%, while the blue-chip CSI300 index was up +1.98%.

Note: PBoC Governor Yi Gang said yesterday that the PBOC’s “prudent” monetary policy will emphasise counter-cyclical adjustments. He indicated that there is still some room for the PBoC to cut RRR and said the bank “will work on lowering risk premiums that have kept lending rates for small firms relatively elevated.”

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In Europe, regional bourses are trading higher across the board, led by the FTSE on a weaker sterling (£1.2989) and on reports that PM May to most likely change the planned meaningful vote scheduled for tomorrow, to a provisional one.

U.S stocks are set to open in the ‘black’ (+0.1%)

Indices: Stoxx600 +0.14% at 371.10, FTSE +0.76% at 7,158.75, DAX +0.14% at 11,474.16, CAC-40 +0.04% at 5,233.15, IBEX-35 -0.16% at 9,115.05, FTSE MIB +0.10% at 20,504.50, SMI +0.06% at 9,266.80, S&P 500 Futures +0.01%