NFP First, Middle East Second

 | Apr 07, 2017 06:39AM ET

Friday April 7: Five things the markets are talking about

Momentum in the U.S labor market was strong going into last month, however bad weather during nonfarm payroll’s (NFP) mid-March sample week pose the risk of weather-related delays in hiring.

Market consensus is looking for a headline print atop of +180k mark, which would be a very healthy rate of monthly growth, but off the Jan and Feb pace of +235k. A weaker print will have the market revising U.S Q1 GDP expectations.

Note: Advance indicators this week are mixed. Tuesday’s ADP did not see any weakness for Mar., but instead recorded a solid gain (+263k vs. +184k), extending both Jan and Feb’s trend. In contrast, the employment-index of the ISM non-manufacturing report Wed. points to a slowdown in hiring. Yesterday’s U.S weekly jobless claims posted the largest drop in two years (+234k vs. +251k).

The U.S unemployment rate is expected to hold steady atop of its nine-year low of +4.7%.

Investors are also watching developments from the summit in Florida between Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Note: Expect the market to remain very nervous after Trump’s missile attack on Syria last night – the capital market move, since dissipated, triggered an instant reaction across everything from stocks to commodities and currencies.

The attack caused a knee-jerk shift into safe-havens, although the impact was moderate as it is being interpreted as a “one-off” proportionate response.

1. No surprise, global equities mixed response to Syria missile attack

Japan’s Nikkei (+0.4%) share average edged up in choppy trade overnight, but gains were limited as the U.S missile strike on Syria curbed investors’ risk appetite. The broader Topix index climbed +0.7%.

In China, the Shanghai Composite Index rose +0.2%, and completed a +2% gain for the holiday-shortened week. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng dropped -0.4%, while Singapore’s Straits Times Index fell -0.3%.

In Europe, equity indices are trading lower amid geopolitical tensions. Banking stocks are leaning on Eurostoxx 600, while the FTSE 100 is slightly outperforming as oil stocks trade higher in line with Brent and WTI contracts.

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

Indices: Stoxx50 -0.5% at 3,474, FTSE -0.1% at 7,294, DAX -0.6% at 12,161, CAC 40 -0.4% at 5,102, IBEX 35 -0.7% at 10,442, FTSE MIB -0.3% at 20,238, SMI -0.5% at 8,598, S&P 500 Futures -0.1%