Dollar Subdued Ahead Of ECB

 | Mar 07, 2019 06:44AM ET

Thursday March 7: Five things the markets are talking about

Global equities are mostly lower as revised lower economic forecasts add to investor worries about the outlook for global growth. The ‘big’ dollar has climbed for a seventh consecutive session while U.S Treasuries ticked a tad higher.

Already this week, the OECD cut global growth estimates again and the U.S trade deficit widened to levels not seen in a decade.

Ahead of this morning’s ECB monetary policy meeting, global central banks continue to stay on a “dovish” path. On Monday, RBA governor Lowe signaled it is hard to think “rates will rise,” while yesterday it was the Bank of Canada (BoC) “very bleak” policy statement which put further pressure on the Loonie (C$1.3440).

Separately, an ECB sourced report ahead of the today’s scheduled meeting (07:45 ET) suggests that growth rate forecasts are likely to come down enough to justify launching a new TLTRO program later this year.

Trade remains the dominate theme for markets with investors waiting for details of a possible China-U.S accord, as President Trump is itching to cut a deal with Beijing soon.

Elsewhere, sterling (£1.3173) is steady despite European officials being pessimistic about the chances of a breakthrough in Brexit talks this week. In commodities, investors are weighing up a U.S crude-stockpile surge – will it be a threat to OPEC’s bid to avert a glut against a drop-in fuel inventory?

On tap: ECB policy makers are expected to leave rates unchanged amid a deteriorating outlook. Draghi will hold a news conference at 08:30 am ET.

1. Stocks have mixed feelings

In Japan, the Nikkei hit a one-week low overnight, with chip-related stocks tracking a decline in their U.S. peers and financials retreating as they slash profit outlooks. The Nikkei share average ended down -0.65%, while the broader Topix dropped -0.84%.

Down-under, Aussie shares advanced overnight as hopes for an RBA rate cut supported consumer and financial stocks, but gains were capped by a weak mining sector. The S&P/ASX 200 index rose +0.3% at the close of trade. The benchmark gained +0.8% on Wednesday. In S. Korea, the Kospi index fell for a fifth straight session, tracking Wall Street losses the OECD cut global growth forecasts again. The benchmark index fell -0.45%overnight, the index has lost -3.1% in the last five sessions.

In China, blue-chips fell overnight after four consecutive sessions of gains while Shanghai shares closed slightly higher, after the finance minister reiterated that China “would not seek to flood a slowing economy with stimulus.” At the close, the Shanghai Composite index was up +0.14%, while the blue-chip CSI300 index ended -1.02% lower. In Hong Kong, stocks fell on Thursday on investor caution over the outlook for global growth. At the close of trade, the Hang Seng index was down -0.89%, while the Hang Seng China Enterprises index fell -1.14%.

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In Europe, regional bourses trade mostly lower across the board following a mixed session in Asia and lower U.S Index futures ahead of today ECB rate meeting.

U.S stocks are set to open in the ‘red’ (-0.23%).

Indices: Stoxx600 -0.42% at 373.90, FTSE -0.52% at 7,158.87, DAX -0.53% at 11,526.43, CAC-40 -0.39% at 5,268.38, IBEX-35 +0.09% at 9,305.49, FTSE MIB -0.17% at 20,816.50, SMI -0.52% at 9,348.50 S&P 500 Futures -0.23%