Brexit, U.S. Trade And Government Shutdown In Focus

 | Jan 17, 2019 06:43AM ET

h3 Thursday, January 17: Five Things The Markets Are Talking About

With the U.S. government shutdown and the U.K’s Brexit standoff ongoing, coupled with the drawn-out Sino-U.S. trade situation, there are enough reasons in play for investor market caution.

Overnight, the demand for risk assets has taken a step back again, with global equities trading under pressure ahead of the North America session on investor concerns of rising tensions between the world’s two largest economies, U.S. and China.

Some of this negativity has been offset by a better than expected start to the U.S. earnings season. In equities, banks led the decline of disappointing trading revenues, while tech shares sentiment was dinged on news that U.S. prosecutors are investigating China’s Huawei Technologies (SZ:002502) for corporate espionage.

The ‘big’ dollar has edged a tad higher against G10 currency pairs along with the yen (¥108.77), while U.S treasuries and European sovereign bonds are better bid ahead of the U.S. open.

Sterling (£1.2871) has been relatively quiet, as the odds of a ‘soft-Brexit’ have risen again now that PM Theresa May narrowly survived a “no” confidence vote held yesterday – if there was a general election, the likelihood of a ‘no-deal’ Brexit would have risen.

On tap: U.S. ADP) non-farm employment change and Philly Fed manufacturing (08:30 am EDT).

1. Global equities produce mixed results

In Japan, the Nikkei eased overnight, reversing earlier gains, as investors remained concerned about the global economy and trade war tensions. The Nikkei share average closed down -0.2% after its intraday bounce towards a new four-week high. The broader Topix retained its initial gains to end the day up +0.35% on speculation that next weeks Bank of Japan (BoJ) monetary policy meeting could consider changing the composition of its ETF purchases with a heavier emphasis on the Topix.

Down-under, Aussie stocks closed at two-month highs, supported by stronger materials and energy stocks. The S&P/ASX 200 index rallied +0.26% for its third consecutive session of gains – it had rallied +0.4% in the previous session. In S. Korea, the Kospi stock index traded steady with no new risks, while Brexit uncertainties remained and Beijing plans to inject more cash into its financial system. At the close, the index was +0.05% higher.

In China, stocks ended weaker overnight on signs of sluggish economic growth and as Chinese Premier Li forecasted a “rigid year ahead.” At the close, the Shanghai Composite index was down -0.4%, while China’s blue-chip CSI300 index ended down -0.6%. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng Index closed lower by -0.7%.

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Note: To avert a cash crunch, the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) injected a net +$83B into their financial system on Wednesday, and added ¥380B more yuan overnight.

In Europe, regional bourses trade mostly lower with the DAX underperforming on Chinese growth fears, while in the U.K, the FTSE is under pressure despite PM May winning a ‘no’ confidence vote – Brexit uncertainty continues to weigh on sentiment.

U.S stocks are set to open in the red (-0.39%).

Indices: Stoxx600 -0.15% at 350.06, FTSE -0.45% at 6,831.75, DAX -0.49% at 10,878.19, CAC-40 -0.32% at 4,795.12, IBEX-35 =0.05% at 8,917.00, FTSE MIB -0.13% at 19,452.50, SMI +0.44% at 8,909.20, S&P 500 Futures -0.39%