Eurozone Economic Growth Stronger Than Expected

 | Apr 30, 2019 06:51AM ET

Tuesday, April 30: Five things the markets are talking about

The Fed’s two-day policy meeting gets underway today. Officials are poised to keep interest rates steady when it concludes Wednesday. Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s press conference will surely not want to be missed – will he be standing by his recent ‘dovish’ outlook?

Currently, solid U.S growth and muted price measures continue to support the Fed’s holding stance. The Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, the price index for personal-consumption expenditures, rose just +1.5% last month from March 2018. Ex-food and energy, core inflation was only slightly stronger at +1.6%, well below the Fed’s desired +2%.

Global equities had been trading under pressure in the overnight session on reported disappointed earnings from Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) and Samsung (KS:005930), one day after new record high prints stateside. Both U.S treasuries’ and the ‘big’ dollar have found a small bid on the back of disappointed investors. Nevertheless, some positive Euro data ahead of the U.S open has managed to pare back some of the euro-equities losses.

This morning’s plethora of economic releases saw European data beat expectations on both the growth and inflation fronts (eurozone, Italian and Spanish GDP data; Italian unemployment, French, German, Spanish, Italian CPI readings).

Note: Markets in Japan remain closed for Golden Week, reopens May 6, while a number of other countries are set to follow suit on May 1 (CNY, CHF, GER. Fr. & ITL).

For now, various asset classes seem caught in the ‘twilight zone.’ Expect investors and dealers to continue to look for signals at the Feds policy meeting on Wednesday and earnings reports from the likes of Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), GE and McDonald’s (NYSE:MCD) for some conviction.

On the Sino-U.S trade front, the next round of trade talks are expected to get underway later today with significant issues still unresolved, but with enforcement mechanisms “close to done” according to Treasury Secretary Mnuchin.

On tap: CAD GDP, consumer confidence & NZD employment change (Apr 30), Bank holiday – CNY, CHF, GER. Fr. & ITL, U.S ISM manufacturing PMI, FOMC monetary policy statement & CNY Caixin manufacturing PMI (May 1), U.K inflation report, BoE monetary policy statement & AUD building approvals (May 2), non-farm payroll (May 3).

1. Stocks start to wobble

Global equities have mostly edged down overnight after Wall Street hit a new high closing Monday, raising questions about how much longer the rally can continue while rising oil prices threaten to push inflation higher.

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Note: Tokyo’s Nikkei was closed for a public holiday, reopens May 6.

Down-under, Aussie shares ended atop of their one-week low overnight as energy and mining stocks dropped sharply after disappointing factory data from China highlighted weakness in its economy. The S&P/ASX 200 index closed down -0.5%, after losing -0.4% yesterday. However, the index has advanced for a fourth consecutive month in April, gaining +2.3%. In S. Korea, the Kospi stock index ended lower, down -0.58%, also hit by disappointing China April factory growth. For the month, the Kospi has rallied +2.94%.

In China, stocks rallied overnight despite lacklustre factory activity data. The blue-chip CSI300 index rose +0.3%, while the Shanghai Composite Index gained +0.5%.

China April manufacturing PMI (OFFICIAL): 50.1 vs. 50.6E; Non-manufacturing PMI: 54.3 vs. 55.0e; Composite PMI: 53.4 v 54.0 prior. China April Caixin PMI manufacturing: 50.2 vs. 50.9E – however, export orders and employment back in contraction (below 50).

Note: The China market will be closed starting tomorrow due to the Labour Day holidays, and will reopen on Monday, May 6.

In Hong Kong, shares ended weaker overnight, hurt by declines in property and energy stocks, as the market awaits fresh stimulus after decent returns thus far in 2019. The Hang Seng index closed -0.7% lower at 29,699.11, while the China Enterprises Index ended down -0.8%.

Note: The index will be closed on Wednesday for Labour Day holiday, and will resume trading on Thursday, May 2.

In Europe, regional bourses trade mostly lower after mixed session in Asia and mixed U.S futures.

U.S stocks are set to open in the ‘red’ (-0.6%).

Indices: Stoxx600 -0.14% at 390.68, FTSE -0.14% at 7,430.25, DAX -0.10% at 12,315.72, CAC-40 -0.40% at 5,558.48, IBEX-35 -0.32% at 9,487.06, FTSE MIB +0.15% at 21,821.50, SMI +0.31% at 9,770.50, S&P 500 Futures -0.06%