Stocks Take Their Cue From Wall Street

 | May 18, 2017 06:57AM ET

Thursday May 18: Five things the markets are talking about

Investor bets that President Trump’s policies would boost growth and inflation has been unwinding for months, but, those moves have intensified this week.

Global stocks, the mighty U.S. dollar and government bond yields have been under pressure as investors pull back from their bets on the swift passage of the Trump administration’s agenda.

Despite Trump continuing to hold the support of most Republicans, the market is becoming increasingly concerned that deeper cracks could emerge.

Since yesterday, the flight from risk assets has managed to send the VIX +30% higher, and trading a tad shy of +16, has filled the gap made into the French election.

It’s not just the political anxiety, but combined with some softer U.S. data of late, retail sales and inflation, is lowering the odds of a June rate hike.

h3 1. Stocks take their cue from Wall Street/h3

Equities in Asia followed the U.S lead, where the Dow and S&P 500 both sinking about -1.8% yesterday following reports that Trump tried to influence a federal probe.

In Japan, the Nikkei fell to a three-week low, falling -1.3%, as worries over Trump allegations offset a strong preliminary GDP for Q1 (+0.5%). The broader Topix saw similar pressure, falling -1.4%.

In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng Index fell -0.7% while the Hang Seng China Enterprise (CEI) retreated -1.2%.

Down-under, the Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index lost -0.8% despite a stronger Aussie employment change (+37.4k vs. +5k).

In Europe, ahead of the U.S. open, regional indices trade modestly lower across the board with the FTSE 100 leading the decliners, basically shadowing U.S losses.

U.S stocks are set to open in the red (-0.1%).

Indices: Stoxx50 -0.8% at 3220, FTSE -1.2% at 7415, DAX -0.7% at 12539, CAC 40 -0.9% at 5268, IBEX 35 -1.3% at 10645, FTSE MIB -1.7% at 20915, SMI -0.9% at 8922, S&P 500 Futures -0.1%

h3 2. Oil down, as market stays well supplied, gold loses some shine/h3

Oil prices are a tad lower on news that the market remains well supplied with crude despite efforts by OPEC to curb production and support prices.

Brent crude is down -17c at +$52.04 a barrel, while U.S light crude oil (WTI) is -16c lower at +$48.91.

Both benchmarks rose yesterday after news of a drawdown in U.S. crude inventories and a dip in U.S. output.

Note: The U.S. EIA said inventories fell -1.8m barrels in the week to May 12 to +520.8m barrels.

OPEC ministers meet in Vienna on May 25 to decide production policy for the next six-months. The market is expecting producers to prolong their agreement to limit production, perhaps by up to nine-months.

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Heading into the U.S session, gold prices are a tad weaker (-0.2% at +$1,258.02 per ounce) after touching its two-week high overnight, mostly weighed down by profit taking.

The yellow metal rose about +2% yesterday, its biggest one-day percentage gain in 12-months.