Investing.com | Mar 04, 2019 05:37AM ET
Global stocks and futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 climbed and the Chinese yuan dropped this morning, as hopes for an imminent U.S.-China trade deal gained ground after Beijing reportedly committed to stepping up intellectual-property rights protection and to purchasing a substantial amount of U.S. goods.
The STOXX Europe 600 edged higher with technology and mining shares, nearing a five-month high. The pan-European benchmark gapped up at the open (+0.21%) for the second consecutive session, and shortly extended gains to 0.46%, where it was trading near the top of the day.
In the earlier Asian session, China’s Shanghai Composite (+1.12%) outperformed on the more solid prospects of a trade breakthrough, followed by Japan’s Nikkei 225 (+1.02%).
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Meanwhile, the yield on 10-year Treasurys dropped on increased demand for U.S. bonds. That should raise a red flag for equity bulls: why is demand for Treasurys edging higher in a risk-on day? Technically, yields found resistance by the Jan. 18 highs, which means that some investors don’t think they can go any higher. In other words, they are bullish on Treasurys—an omen for stocks.
In FX trading, the dollar rebounded from an earlier decline, extending a rally to the fourth day in a push to stretch out its short-term uptrend.
The yuan is inching lower, hovering 0.18% below its Feb. 27 close—the lowest since July 16—as investors gain more trust in China's pledges. A weak renminbi also alleviates one of the U.S.’s core issues with China. We have often pointed out that the Chinese currency had been weakening in line with higher prospects for a trade war resolution.
The pound jumped, snapping out of a two-day rut when the price hit the resistance of the Sep. 20 highs, amid optimism U.K. lawmakers would support Prime Minister Theresa May's redrafted proposals to avert a hard Brexit.
Meanwhile, WTI recovered to about $56 a barrel on signs of slowing U.S. output growth, while OPEC+ producers deepened their cutbacks. Technically, the price has been consolidating since breaking out of the Feb. 4 highs’ resistance. The next level for a breakout is the upside of the $57.80s, following through with the uptrend line since the December bottom.
Overall, the direction of global markets, including commodities markets, is riding on the U.S.-China trade deal—and quite a few things could go wrong there. On one hand, we are wondering: should the U.S. and China actually sign a substantial deal, how much of it would have already been priced in? On the other hand, what would happen to markets in the case of a diplomatic setback, or even a fallout? Maybe that’s the reasoning that is driving appetite for Treasurys today.
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