Fed Meeting And Trade Threats To Drive Markets

 | Sep 24, 2018 06:36AM ET

Monday September 24: Five things the markets are talking about

Global equities are under pressure as China called off planned trade talks with US, potentially triggering an escalation in the tariff war between the world’s largest economies.

Note: US’ tariffs on +$200B in China goods took effect at midnight, while China’s counter tariffs on +$60B of US goods also came into effect this morning.

Presidents Trumps’ veiled threat to OPEC to increase global crude supply was met with a tepid response over the weekend. The Saudi oil minister said that the market was adequately supplied.

The ‘big’ dollar continues to find support on pullbacks, while Treasuries trade under pressure along with Euro sovereign bonds.

Topping investors’ agenda this week is the FOMC meeting along with the Fed’s updated forecasts and the chair’s quarterly press conference (Sep 25-26). The market is looking for a third +25 bps rate hike and is pricing in another one for December. Investors await Fed chair Powell’s views on trade and tariffs.

Elsewhere, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) will also meet Wednesday (Sept 26) and no rate hike is expected. The UK posts its final estimate of Q2 GDP, while the Eurozone releases the September flash harmonized index of consumer prices (Sept 28). Also on Friday, Canada will release its monthly GDP data for July.

1. Stocks see red

Asian volumes were light and liquidity a concern as markets in China, Japan, South Korea and Taiwan were closed for holidays. Both Hong Kong and South Korea will be closed on Tuesday.

Note: Despite Japanese markets closed, Japans Economy Minister Motegi and USTR Lighthizer are expected to hold trade talks today in New York. Japan is said to considering a bilateral trade agreement with the US.

Down-under, Aussie stocks edged lower overnight, as lower commodities prices hit materials stocks while financials slipped on new revelations of wrongdoing in the sector revealed in a quasi-judicial inquiry. The S&P/ASX 200 index fell -0.1% at the close of trade. The benchmark rose +0.4% on Friday.

In Hong Kong, stocks plummeted after the US imposed fresh tariffs on an additional +$200B of Chinese imports and as Beijing cancelled planned talks between the two sides. The Hang Seng Index fell -1.62%.

In Europe, regional bourses opened in the ‘red’ and continue to trade lower. Market risk sentiment continues to be impacted over trade concerns as US tariffs came into effect at midnight and China cancels trade talks – consumer discretionary sector among worst performers.

US stocks are set to open in the ‘red’ (-0.2%).

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Indices: STOXX 50 -0.3% at 3,419, FTSE 100 -0.1% at 7,480, DAX -0.3% at 12,389, CAC 40 -0.2% at 5,481, IBEX 35 -0.5% at 9,543, FTSE MIB -0.5% at 21,427, S&P 500 Futures -0.2%