Dollar Stuck In A Contained Vortex

 | May 15, 2019 06:13AM ET

Wednesday May 15: Five things the markets are talking about

Global stocks are struggling to maintain Tuesdays gains as U.S futures have pared some of their earlier overnight advances, while Euro stocks have edged lower. In Asia, China led equity gains overnight despite weaker data (industrial production, retail sales) on investor bets that authorities would increase stimulus.

The ‘big’ dollar continues to tick higher but remains confined to another tight range, while sovereign bond yields trade atop of their two-month lows on the breakdown of Sino-U.S trade negotiations. Nevertheless, financial markets remain on edge as the White House announced it was preparing tariffs on the remaining +$300B of Chinese imports.

Elsewhere, in commodities, oil has pared some of its recent gains on reports that growth in U.S crude stocks is easing market concerns over tighter supplies worries after a drone attack in Saudi Arabia had highlighted the defencelessness of the country’s energy infrastructure.

Heightened intraday volatility is expected at least until Trump meets his counterpart, Xi Jinping, at next month’s G-20 summit.

On tap: Canadian CPI and U.S retails sales are due out at 08:30 am EDT. Down-under, Aussie unemployment numbers are due later this evening.

1. Stocks, a mixed bag

In Japan, the Nikkei ended higher overnight in another whippy session, breaking a seven-day losing streak, on market hopes that China would introduce fresh stimulus to support a slowing economy. The Nikkei share average ended +0.6% higher, while the broader Topix, which hit a four-month low on Tuesday, rallied +0.6%.

Note: Data overnight showed that China retail sales slumped to the lowest since 2003 in April. Sales grew +7.2% y/y, missing forecasts of an +8.6% gain, and a marked slowdown from March’s +8.7%. Also, Industrial production rose just +5.4% y/y after March’s spurt to +8.5%.

Down-under, Aussie shares rebounded overnight on expectations that RBA interest rates may be cut while a fall in the AUD boosted miners. Expectations of a rate cut increased after domestic wage growth stalled in Q1. The S&P/ASX 200 index rose +0.7% at the close of trade. The benchmark fell -0.9% on Tuesday. In S. Korea, the Kospi gained +0.6%.

In China, stock benchmarks rebounded roughly +2%, lifted by consumer shares, as weak industrial output and retail sales data reinforced expectations of fresh stimulus, while a slight softening in rhetoric from Trump also helped to ease trade tensions. China’s blue-chip CSI300 index rose +2.3%, while the Shanghai Composite Index gained +1.9%. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng index ended up +0.5%, while the China Enterprises Index gained +0.4%.

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In Europe, regional bourses trade mainly lower across the board erasing initial gains after some risk-aversion flows coming in U.S futures following China’s Foreign Ministry comments on trade tensions.

U.S stocks are set to open in the ‘black’ (+0.0%).

Indices: Stoxx600 -0.10% at 375.98, FTSE +0.30% at 7,263.30, DAX -0.16% at 11,972.48, CAC-40 -0.35% at 5,322.88, IBEX-35 -0.20% at 9,109.19, FTSE MIB -0.69% at 20,748.50, SMI -0.05% at 9,399.00, S&P 500 Futures -0.01%