Italian Politics To Decide Markets' Fate

 | May 18, 2018 06:37AM ET

Friday May 18: Five things the market is talking about

In Europe, regional bourses are trading a tad lower as EU stocks fail to follow their Asian counter parties higher on a potential breakthrough in trade negotiations between China and the US

The yield on US 10-year notes (+3.105%) is steady after reaching their highest level in seven-years mid-week. The dollar remains little changed against G10 currency pairs, along with gold, amid reports that China offered to cut its annual trade surplus by -$200B, in part by increasing imports of US goods.

Brent crude continues to edge higher after topping +$80 a barrel yesterday amongst Middle East tensions and signs that global stockpiles continue to decrease. Even new uncertainty over peace on the Korean peninsula appears to have been brushed aside.

In Italy, the 5-Star movement leader Luigi Di Maio confirmed agreement on a government contract with the League party. The program is said not to include the call for QE debt to be excluded from debt calculations, and at the moment, have dropped reference to a Euro exit procedure with no mention of request for ECB to write off -€250B in debt.

On tap: Canadian retail sales and inflation numbers are due at 08:30 am EDT. Chinese Vice-Premier Liu He is in Washington for more trade talks.

1. Stocks mixed results

Japan’s Nikkei share average rallied to a four-month high overnight and printed its eighth straight weekly gain after a weaker yen (¥111.00) lifted exporters. The Nikkei gained +0.4%, while the broader TOPIX rallied +0.5%.

Down-under, the Aussie stock benchmark struggled overnight, resulting in a third drop in four-days and put an end to the six-week winning streak. The S&P/ASX 200 eased -0.1%, putting the week’s decline at -0.5%. In South Korea, stocks finished strongly. The KOSPI rallied +0.5% to 2460.65, cutting the week’s drop to -0.7% in reversing last week’s gain.

China and Hong Kong stocks rose slightly overnight, as investors bet Beijing and Washington would reach a compromise in trade talks. The CSI300 index rose +0.1%, while the Shanghai Composite Index gained +0.3%. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng index added +0.2%.

In Europe, indices trade lower across the board following recent gains and slight weakness in the US markets overnight.

US stocks are set to open in the ‘black’ (+0.1%).

Indices: STOXX 600 -0.3% at 394.5, FTSE 100 -0.2% at 7770.4, DAX -0.1% at 13094, CAC 40 -0.3% at 5605, IBEX 35 -0.5% at 10163, FTSE MIB -1.1% at 23548, SMI -0.3% at 8960, S&P 500 Futures +0.1%