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 | Mar 28, 2019 08:43AM ET

Thursday March 28: Five things the markets are talking about

The ‘big’ dollar remains better bid, supported by continued signs of a weakening European economy, which is spreading investor concerns about a slowdown in global growth.

Even interest rate differentials are providing the ‘greenback’ support as central banks signal, they are backing away from their desire to hike interest rates as part of their goal of bringing monetary policy in line with pre-crisis norms.

On the geo-political front, UK MP’s failed to find a majority for any alternative Brexit arrangement yesterday to PM May’s Brexit deal, but agreed by an overwhelming majority that they opposed leaving the EU without any agreement.

Parliament vote breakdown:

  • U.K. Parliament Votes Against No-Deal Exit 400 to 160
  • Votes against EU Single Market, Customs Union by 288 to 188
  • Votes against EU Single Market by 377 to 65
  • Votes against EU Customs Union by 272 to 264
  • Votes Against Customs Union, Close Alignment with Single Market by 307 to 237
  • Votes show no clear majority for any Brexit option
  • Votes against cancelling Brexit to avoid no deal by 293 to 185
  • Votes against new referendum on deal by 295 to 268
  • Votes against ‘managed’ no-deal exit 422 to 139

What’s clear is that PM May’s divorce deal still does not have sufficient backing, even after she offered to quit this summer if the deal is ratified, and that support for a ‘harder’ Brexit route is weakening. Brexit’s next step remains unknown – the U.K has only a fortnight before it has to go the EU with a plan for its next steps.

Elsewhere, Turkey remains in focus after domestic stocks suffered their biggest one day loss in three years in reaction to government measures aimed at preventing banks from facilitating deals that lead to a decline in the TRY ahead of this weekend’s elections that will test support for President Erdogan leadership.

On tap: China-U.S trade talks begin today, U.S final GDP (Mar 28), GBP current a/c, CAD GDP (Mar 29).

1. Stocks mixed signals

In Japan, the Nikkei slipped overnight as lower U.S bond yields fuelled investor fears about a slowdown in the world’s largest economy and a deepening downturn globally. The Nikkei share average closed -1.6% lower, while the broader Topix fell -1.7%.

Down-under, Aussie stocks ended higher overnight, as investors welcomed signs of possible progress towards a U.S-China trade deal, with miners and energy stocks leading the way. The S&P/ASX 200 index closed +0.7% higher. In S. Korea, the Kospi stock index closed down -0.82% overnight as investors remained cautious over global growth concerns as well as corporate earnings.

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In China, stocks ended weaker overnight as lingering concerns over the domestic economy and trade weighed on investor sentiment. At the close, the Shanghai Composite index was down -0.92%, while the blue-chip CSI300 index was down -0.4%. In Hong Kong, stocks closed out in positive territory on investor hopes of a positive outcome in trade talks. At the close of trade, the Hang Seng index was up +0.16%, while the Hang Seng China Enterprises index fell -0.09%.

In Europe, regional bourses trade higher across the board, tracking higher U.S futures and mixed Asian Indices.

U.S stocks are set to open in the ‘black’ (+0.08%).

Indices: Stoxx600 +0.37% at 378.68, FTSE +0.74% at 7,247.25, DAX +0.54% at 7,247.25, CAC-40 +0.44% at 5,324.55, IBEX-35 +0.04% at 9,234.04, FTSE MIB -0.02% at 21,190.50, SMI +0.61% at 9,447.50, S&P 500 Futures +0.08%