Brexit Breakthrough Hopes Lift Sterling

 | Nov 01, 2018 06:54AM ET

Wednesday October 31: Five things the markets are talking about

October was the worst month in six-years for global equities, and despite a 48-hour reprieve on the final two-day’s of trading as investors balanced portfolios, November begins with regional bourses providing some mixed results.

The earnings season has carried on with pockets of weakness overseas on concerns surrounding trade; input costs, and while strong growth in the U.S, for now, largely offsets tariffs.

U.S Treasury prices are lower despite the ongoing heartache in equity markets pushing the U.S benchmark yield back above +3.15%.

Sterling has rallied aggressively overnight ahead of today’s Bank of England (BoE) monetary policy decision (08:00 am EDT) on reports that PM Theresa May and E.U negotiators have reached a tentative agreement that would give U.K. financial services companies continued access to European markets after Brexit.

Elsewhere, the Chinese yuan has rallied from his decade low outright; along with commodity currencies (CAD, AUD and NZD) as Chinese leadership signals that further stimulus measures are being planned.

Speaking of commodities, oil has extended its decline after its worst month in more than two-years.

On tap: U.S ISM manufacturing PMI (10:00 am EDT).

1. Stocks mixed results

In Japan, the Nikkei fell overnight, pressured by large cap mobile phone companies, who make up +80% of the index, said lower service fees will start hitting the bottom line in the next fiscal year. The Nikkei share average dropped -1.06%, while the broader Topix fell -0.85%.

Down-under, the Aussie benchmark index closed slightly higher overnight as shares in BHP Billiton (LON:BLT) Ltd ADR (NYSE:BHP) rallied over +6.2% on the announcement of +$10.4B shareholder return. The S&P/ASX 200 index rose +0.18%. In S. Korea, the KOSPI stock index dropped -0.26% overnight, snapping two-session gains, as concerns linger over a Sino-U.S trade row.

In China, shares rallied Thursday after a tough October that saw the country’s blue-chip index drop more than -8%, on news that leaders are to continue to take steps to support domestic markets. The Shanghai Composite index was up +0.1%, while the blue-chip Shanghai Shenzhen CSI 300 index was up +0.75%. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng Index was up +1.75%.

In Europe, regional indices trade mixed with underperformance in the FTSE as Brexit optimism pushes the pound (£1.2905) higher, with the BoE rate decision along with the quarterly inflation report in focus.

U.S stocks are set to open in the ‘black (+0.3%).

Indices: STOXX 600 +0.48% at 363.32, FTSE -0.07% at 7,123.16, DAX +0.60% at 11,516.75, CAC 40 +0.20% at 5,103.61, IBEX 35 +0.79% at 8,964.00, FTSE MIB +0.81% at 19,204.50, SMI +0.44% at 9,041.50, S&P 500 Futures +0.33%

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