Oil Stops The Bleed, Sterling Pounded By Polls

 | May 26, 2017 06:57AM ET

Friday May 26: Five things the markets are talking about

Battered Brent Crude Oil prices have stopped the bleeding for now as the market seems to be looking past the disappointment that yesterday’s OPEC meeting did not expand on production cuts, instead of extending.

Global equities too are under pressure following crude oil’s -5% loss yesterday; the loss seems to have undermined sentiment towards risk assets in general.

The pound has slid on a poll showing PM Theresa May’s Conservatives’ lead shrinking, two weeks before an election. According to the latest YouGov/Times poll, the Conservatives lead Labour by +43% to +38% ahead of June 8 election.

Comments from the St. Louis Fed President Bullard (dove) in Tokyo this morning are weighing on the ‘mighty’ dollar as he noted “prices are deviating noticeably from the Fed’s +2% inflation path” and called market expectations of “two more rate hikes this year as too aggressive.”

1. Stocks lose some appeal on risk attitude

In Asian overnight, regional bourses traded mostly mixed despite the continued bullish momentum stateside, where the sixth consecutive positive session Thursday took U.S indices to new record highs.

In Japan, the Nikkei share average extended its losses (-0.6%) as the yen’s gains (¥111.03) outright accelerated – the benchmark index still managed to cap off a winning week (+0.5%). The broader Topix fell -0.6%.

In Hong Kong, stocks broke a five-day winning streak, as gains in air carriers were offset by weakness in energy shares. The Hang Seng index was unchanged, while the China Enterprises Index gained +0.1%. For the week, both Hang Seng and HSCE gained +1.8%.

In China, stocks have ended the week higher with state-led buying offsetting the midweek Moody’s downgrade. The blue-chip CSI 300 index fell -0.2%, while the Shanghai Composite Index added +0.1%. For the week, CSI300 advanced +2.3%, while the SSEC gained +0.6%.

In Europe, regional indices trading mostly lower led by the FTSE MIB and French CAC, with the FTSE100 outperforming having traded new all time highs, mostly supported by a weaker pound (£1.2860).

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

Indices: Stoxx50 -0.7% at 3559, FTSE +0.1% at 7524, DAX -0.4% at 12568, CAC 40 -0.7% at 5298, IBEX 35 -1.0% at 10831, FTSE MIB -1.0% at 21083, SMI -0.2% at 9019, S&P 500 Futures -0.1%