CAD Rallies On Nafta Optimism

 | Sep 12, 2018 05:41AM ET

Wednesday September 12: Five things the markets are talking about

It’s ‘hump’ day and despite the contained trading ranges across the various asset classes, investors have a lot to contend with, and strategize for, as we head towards the Autumn months which are expected to bring heightened volatility and risk aversion to financial markets.

China and EM crisis risk – can they both be pushed deeper at the same time?

U.K and E.U are preparing for a “special” summit in November – will the Irish be blamed for a “hard” Brexit and can PM Theresa May survive a leadership challenge?

Telegraphed Fed rate hikes – is the market willing to accept two more Fed hikes by year-end?

Trump, tariffs and trade – will the President go too far and hurt the U.S economy?

U.S Mid-terms – pro-Democratic November election results?

This morning across the asset classes, global equities mostly see red as investors’ assess the outlook for global growth amidst heightened trade tensions. Oil prices are well supported as dealers try to get a handle on Hurricane Florence potential impact.

U.S two-year yields trade atop a decade high as dealers nail down two more Fed rate hikes to close out this year. U.S 10s have stalled their advance toward +3%, which is providing for a steady U.S dollar against G-10 currency pairs.

On tap: The next three-days are busy on the data front. Today, it’s the release of U.S PPI (08:30 am EDT) and Aussie employment numbers (09:30 pm). Tomorrow, both the ECB and BoE deliver their monetary policy rate announcement and on Friday, both China and the U.S release their industrial production (IP) and retail sales prints.

1. Stocks see mostly red

Market worries about escalation in the Sino-U.S trade war and the outcome of U.S-Japan trade talks negatively impacted Asian regional bourses in the overnight session.

In Japan, the Nikkei fell -0.3% as chip-stocks followed the weakness of their U.S counterparts’ performance yesterday. Not helping was agriculture equipment maker Kubota (T:6326) plummeting after admitting falsifying data. The index closed out the previous session +1.3% higher. The broader Topix lost –0.7%.

Down-under, Aussie shares ended lower on financials and miners. The S&P/ASX 200 index fell -0.1% at the close of trade, having risen +0.6% Tuesday. The index has now fallen for nine of the last 10 sessions. In S. Korea, the KOSPI stock index closed steady (-0.02%) overnight amid investor concerns about EM and the latest round of verbal threats in the Sino-U.S trade conflict.

Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App

In China, stocks fell Wednesday morning, dragging the Shanghai Composite and the blue-chip CSI 300 indexes down to new multi-year lows, on Sino-U.S trade worries, with China seeking WTO sanctions. The Shanghai Composite index was down -0.33%, while China’s blue-chip CSI300 index was down -0.61%.

The declines continued for Hong Kong equities. The Hang Seng Index was off a further -0.5% as it officially entered bear-market territory.

In Europe, regional bourses opened higher, in contrast to Asia, mostly supported by some positive Brexit comments from E.U’s Juncker, who welcomes PM Theresa May’s Brexit proposal and on robust oil and mining stocks

U.S stocks are set to open in the ‘black’ (+0.2%).

Indices: STOXX 600 +0.5% at 373.6, FTSE +0.12% 7282, DAX +0.% at 12030, CAC 40 -0.8% at 5326, IBEX 35 +0.2% at 9285, FTSE MIB +0.27% at 20909, SMI +0.6% at 8970, S&P 500 Futures +0.2%