Is The Dovish Policy Swivel From G7 CB’s The Right Move?

 | Apr 23, 2019 07:06AM ET

Tuesday April 23: Five things the markets are talking about

Most equity markets have opened after the long holiday weekend with mixed results. European stocks have started under pressure, while U.S futures trade rangebound and Asian equities recorded a mixed showing in the overnight session as the U.S earnings season reporting begins to intensify.

Note: Asian trading volumes remain below the 30-day average just ahead of Japan’s Golden Week holidays (April 29).

In commodities, crude oil prices have extended their recent U.S ‘no waiver’ gains and continue to excite oil bulls. The ‘big’ dollar still has support amongst the majors in another tight range, while U.S treasury yields remain somewhat steady, while Euro yields back up a tad.

Investors continue to look for signs as to whether the ‘dovish’ policy swivel from G7 central banks in recent months is the correct move to solidify global growth just enough to outweigh any weakness in corporate earnings.

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.

1. Stocks mixed results

In Japan, the Nikkei average ended modestly higher overnight, with oil-related stocks leading the gains after the U.S announced the move to end all Iran sanctions waivers Monday. The benchmark Nikkei 225 index closed out a gain of +0.2%, a five-month high. The broader Topix added +0.3%.

Note: With Japanese companies releasing their annual results later this week and ahead of the 10-day Golden Week holiday, do not be surprised to see investors book some profits.

Down-under, Aussie shares ended atop of their eight-month high overnight, supported by gains in banking and energy stocks. The S&P/ASX 200 index closed up +1%. The benchmark had added about +0.1% last Thursday. In S. Korea, the Kospi stock index was largely unchanged (+0.17%) overnight as investors remained cautious ahead of the release of Korea’s Q1 GDP data, which is forecast to be weak (+0.3% – the weakest in nearly two-years).

In China, equities edged lower again overnight, extending this week’s sharp declines over how much additional support Beijing will provide to the economy after growth beat expectations. The Shanghai Composite index was down -0.5%, while China’s blue-chip CSI300 index was down -0.02%.

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Note: The CSI300 and Shanghai Composite both recorded their biggest single-day drops since March 25 on Monday.

In Hong Kong, stocks ended little changed after the long holiday weekend. At the close of trade, the Hang Seng index was down -0.1%, the Hang Seng China Enterprises index fell -0.32%.

In Europe, regional bourses trade mostly lower with the exception of the FTSE 100 following the holiday weekend and after a mixed Asian session.

U.S stocks are set open in the ‘red’ (-0.5%).

Indices: Stoxx600 -0.25% at 389.48, FTSE +0.39% at 7,488.77, DAX -0.13% at 12,205.90, CAC-40 -0.18% at 5,570.31, IBEX-35 -0.57% at 9,526.85, FTSE MIB -0.17% at 21,919.50, SMI -0.21% at 9,551.50, S&P 500 Futures -0.05%