Markets Take A Risk Pause, Brexit Divorce Next

 | Mar 28, 2017 07:02AM ET

Tuesday March 28: Five things the markets are talking about

The GOP’s healthcare failure has not derailed market sentiment about fiscal stimulus it has temporarily modified it.

For now, with the pendulum of U.S political momentum having swayed in favor of ‘gridlock’ continues to hamper the “big” dollars natural progress and pressure both bond yields and equity prices.

However, in relatively quiet trading, that pace of decline has subsided somewhat overnight. To reignite capital markets bullish momentum investors will want to see concrete details about U.S tax reforms, infrastructure spending and deregulation.

It’s believed that President Trump is prepared to work more with the Democrats, after feeling burned by sectors of his own party, while combining tax reform with an infrastructure investment initiative that may be an easier sell to the ‘left.’

Remember, legislative gridlock stateside is not unusual, just look to the final years of the Obama administration, yet the stock market and the U.S dollar performed somewhat admirably.

U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May will tomorrow formally trigger the start of two-years of Brexit negotiations with a letter announcing Britain’s planned withdrawal from the EU.

1. Global equities stop the bleeding

The selloff in riskier global assets has eased, with most equity markets resuming their upward trajectories as the dollar steadies after U.S stocks staged a recovery on Monday.

In Japan, the Nikkei share average rebounded (+1.1%) from a more than six-week low overnight as a rally in the yen (¥110.66) paused and investors bought high-yield stocks before they went ex-dividend. The broader Topix gained +1.3%.

In Hong Kong, stocks resisted China’s downdraft and followed Asia higher on cautious hopes that U.S. President Trump would eventually be able to pass his planned economic stimulus policies. The Hang Seng index rose +0.6%, while the China Enterprises Index also gained +0.6%.

In China, stocks fell overnight on concerns about tightening liquidity conditions after the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) refrained from injecting short-term funds into the banking system for the third consecutive session. The blue-chip CSI300 index fell -0.2%, while the Shanghai Composite Index lost -0.4%.

In Europe, equity indices are trading generally higher across the board. Banking stocks are mixed in the Euro Stoxx 50, while commodity and mining shares support the FTSE 100.

U.S stocks are set to open little changed (+0.1%).

Indices: Stoxx50 +0.3% at 3,446, FTSE flat at 7,294, DAX +0.6% at 12,067, CAC 40 flat at 5,017, IBEX 35 +0.4% at 10,346, FTSE MIB +0.4% at 20,205, SMI +0.2% at 8,611, S&P 500 Futures +0.1%

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