Dollar Looking For Directional Help

 | Apr 09, 2019 06:26AM ET

Tuesday April 9: Five things the markets are talking about

So far, much of the global equity rally has been supported by investor bets that U.S economic growth will be strong enough to support corporate profits, but modest enough to keep the Fed from having to hike interest rates. In reality, the market gets their next look at how well that theory is holding up as earnings season kicks off in earnest later this week.

Overnight, some of the equity gains have been capped and are now drifting lower, along with U.S equity futures, after President Trump threatened new tariffs on goods produced in Europe. U.S Treasuries are trading steady along with the dollar ‘bid.’

Focus also remains on the prospects for a conclusion in trade talks between the U.S and China, as well as key events this week, including U.S inflation data, an ECB monetary policy decision and PM Theresa May’s meeting with E.U leaders beginning later today.

In commodities, crude oil trades atop of its recent five-month high as an escalation of fighting in OPEC+ producer Libya overshadowed an increase in U.S rigs.

On Brexit, the EU is said to be settling on the idea of offering an extension to Britain despite the lack of progress at home. If so, expect the EU to set a high price for delaying Brexit including the U.K to potentially give up rights in future EU budget and trade talks.

On tap: GBP GDP & manufacturing product, ECB monetary policy statement, USD CPI & FOMC meeting minutes (Apr 10). The World Bank/IMF spring meetings begin later today.

1. Stocks mixed results

In Japan, the Nikkei ended higher overnight as tech shares and machinery stocks outperformed. The Nikkei share average ended +0.2% higher, while the broader Topix shed -0.1%.

Down-under, Aussie stocks were little changed overnight, with losses among financials erasing gains from energy stocks, as investors remained cautious ahead of a looming U.S earnings season. The S&P/ASX 200 index climbed + 0.01% at the close of trade. The benchmark rose +0.7% on Monday. In S. Korea, the Kospi index ended small down. The index lost -0.1% at close of trade.

In China, the blue chip CSI300 index rallied overnight as Beijing took steps to encourage “urbanisation to support economic growth,” but the broader Shanghai index ended lower on uncertainty over Sino-U.S trade talks. At the close, the blue-chip CSI300 index gained +0.5%, while the Shanghai Composite index lost -0.2%.

In Hong Kong, stocks ended higher on China policy optimism. At the close of trade, the Hang Seng index was up +0.3%, while the Hang Seng China Enterprises index rallied +0.2%.

In Europe, regional bourses have opened broadly lower, feeding through to some support for regional bond markets.

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U.S stocks are set to open deep in the ‘red’ (-0.6%).

Indices: Stoxx600 +0.25% at 388.48, FTSE -0.08% at 7,445.65, DAX +0.08% at 11,974.36, CAC-40 +0.21% at 5,483.17, IBEX-35 +0.40% at 9,480.95, FTSE MIB +0.48% at 21,876.50, SMI +0.58% at 9,603.10, S&P 500 Futures -0.06%