Deja Vu In Capital Markets

 | Sep 30, 2016 08:00AM ET

Friday September 30: Five things the markets are talking about

Despite having already seen the script, investors seem unwilling to improvise, but prefer to act out what’s gone before.

This week is closing out with markets shifting their focus from rallying energy on an OPEC output cut, to financials as Germany’s Deutsche Bank (DE:DBKGn) bears the brunt of liquidity concerns.

Investors’ growing fears that Germany’s largest bank could become the next Lehman brothers are supporting risk-aversion strategies across the various asset classes (gold, CHF and sovereign bonds).

If the market happens to be forced into a crisis because of the German bank’s woes it would make a complete travesty of the last nine-years efforts by both regulators and governments.

1. Global indices see red

Global bourses have extended their losses on Friday as worries about the health of Deutsche Bank weighed on financial stocks and as oil prices retreat from this months highs on doubts over OPEC’s new plan to curb output in November.

Overnight, the MSCI Asia Pacific Index dropped -1%, with financial stocks accounting for almost a third of the decline.

In early euro trade, the Stoxx Europe 600 Index has slid -1.5%, paring its Q3’s advance to +2.4%. Deutsche Bank shares have tumbled -8.1%.

U.S futures are to set open down -0.2%+ ahead of further Fed rhetoric (Dallas President Kaplan) and U.S personal spending data.

Indices: Stoxx50 -1.3% at 2949, FTSE -1% at 6,849, DAX -1.2% at 10,10284, CAC 40 -1.3% at 4,382, IBEX 35 -1.9% at 8,628, FTSE MIB -1.1% at 16,157, SMI -1.4% at 8,051, S&P 500 Futures -0.2%