Dollar Remains Dominant Force, Stocks Lose Some Luster

 | Apr 24, 2019 06:43AM ET

Wednesday, April 24: Five things the markets are talking about

European and Asian equities are/have been under pressure this Wednesday morning, while U.S stocks are pointing to a nondescript open, one day after a new registered record close. U.S Treasuries are climbing, and the dollar is slowly extending its rally to a six-week high.

Note: Both the S&P 500 index and the Nasdaq posted record closing highs yesterday after a plethora of better-than-expected earnings reports eased investor concerns about a U.S economic slowdown.

Elsewhere, sterling is coming under renewed pressure as U.K PM Theresa May is expected to push hard to get some sort of a Brexit deal through Parliament by the end of this month, while emerging-market and oil pegged currencies are on the back foot after a few sessions of gains.

On the Sino-U.S trade front, Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin announced yesterday that they will travel to Beijing for trade talks beginning on April 30.

On tap this week: Stateside, Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), Facebook (NASDAQ:FB), Twitter, Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) and Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) report earning’s this week. In Europe, bank earnings from Deutsche Bank (DE:DBKGn), UBS, Barclays (LON:BARC), Credit Suisse (SIX:CSGN) and Swedbank. On the monetary policy front, the Bank of Japan (BoJ), Bank of Canada (BoC) and Sweden’s Riksbank (April 24) set monetary policy. Japan’s Shinzo Abe will meet EU leaders Thursday before flying to the U.S for a summit with Trump. On Friday, advanced U.S GDP should keep markets busy.

1. Stocks lose some of their luster

In Japan, the Nikkei edged lower in choppy trade overnight as investors remain cautious during earnings season, but the index remained atop of its five-month high as sentiment remains somewhat supported by a rally in equities stateside. The Nikkei share average ended -0.3% lower, while the broader Topix dropped -0.7%. With a number of earnings reports due out at the end of the week, don’t expect investors to be taking on large positions ahead of Japan’s 10-day Golden Week holiday starting this weekend.

Down-under, Aussie stocks ended at a 12-year high overnight with banking and healthcare stocks leading the gains, as weak CPI data (+0.3% vs. +0.4% q/q) this week supported the prospects of a Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) interest rate cut as early as next month. The S&P/ASX 200 index rallied +1% – the benchmark also gained +1% on Tuesday. In S. Korea, the Kospi stock index fell -0.88% overnight as fragile corporate earnings and a weakening currency weighed on the market. KRW lost -0.8% outright overnight.

In China, stocks rallied a tad, recouping early losses, supported by a late rally in tech shares that seems to have offset investor concerns that the PBoC could scale back the scope of further policy easing. At the close, the blue-chip CSI300 index rose +0.3%, while the Shanghai Composite Index gained +0.1%. In contrast, in Hong Kong, stocks came under pressure. The Hang Seng index fell -0.5%, while the China Enterprises index lost -0.6%.

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In Europe, regional bourses trade mostly lower tracking lower U.S futures and mixed Asian Indices as German IFO missed forecasts (see below).

U.S stocks are set to open in the ‘red’ (-0.7%).

Indices: Stoxx600 -0.04% at 391.20, FTSE -0.40% at 7,493.25, DAX +0.40% at 12,284.39, CAC-40 -0.17% at 5,582.31, IBEX-35 -0.36% at 9,492.85, FTSE MIB -0.37% at 21,815.50, SMI +0.42% at 9,675.50, S&P 500 Futures -0.07%