Pound: “We Did Not Mean To Vote For Brexit”

 | Jun 09, 2017 07:00AM ET

Friday June 9: Five things the markets are talking about

It’s little surprise to see sterling tumble, as much as -2.4%, after a disastrous night for the PM Theresa May’s Conservatives party, who with an electoral swing, lost her parliament majority with a hung House of Commons.

The key concern driving U.K asset prices, aside from market liquidity issues, is how this election will impact Britain’s ongoing divorce with the European Union, which Prime Minister Theresa May had already begun three-months ago.

The Conservatives, as the party with most seats (316), will have first shot at trying to form a new government either as a formal coalition with another party or by relying on other parties to help vote through its policies.

If they can’t build a majority large enough to govern, the Labour Party (261) would get a chance to form a government.

What’s left is that the market again faces more political uncertainty and with Comey’s testimony in Washington yesterday, it’s on both sides of the Atlantic.

Note: This morning’s press conference – PM May said she will not step down as PM and is in talks with senior party colleagues about how to form a new government.

For more political intrigue it’s now onto French where voters go to the polls this weekend as part of a two-step process for parliamentary elections. The outcome will decide how much control President Macron will have to enact his legislative agenda.

1. Global stocks mixed results

In Japan, the Nikkei 225 stock average rallied +0.5%, supported by the index heavyweight SoftBank who rallied +7.4% to the highest in 17-years after agreeing to buy Boston Dynamics from Google parent Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL). The broader Topix index rose +0.1%.

In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng fell -0.2%, the Hang Seng China Enterprise (CEI) Index lost -0.6% and the Shanghai Composite added +0.3% – data overnight showed China’s producer price gains moderated following further easing in commodity prices.

Elsewhere, South Korea’s KOSPI index climbed +0.8% and Singapore’s Straits Times Index added +0.5%.

In Europe, indices are trading higher across the board, but off the earlier session highs with out-performance in the FTSE 100 benefiting from -2% slide in the pound (£1.2720).

In the U.S, stocks are set to open in the ‘black.’

Indices: Stoxx50 +0.5% at 3580, FTSE +0.7% at 7499, DAX +0.5% at 12775, CAC-40 +0.6% at 5294 IBEX 35 +0.2% at 10975, FTSE MIB +0.6% at 21165, SMI +0.3% at 8839, S&P 500 Futures +0.2%