Risk Off Moves Supported By Tit-For-Tat Trade Dispute

 | Jun 19, 2018 06:11AM ET

Tuesday June 19: Five things the markets are talking about

The trade dispute between the two economic superpowers, US and China, is getting ugly very quickly and has triggered a global sell-off of riskier assets and flight toward safe haven assets. The fallout is pressuring global equities and providing support for US treasuries, gold and yen.

Ongoing tough trade talk from President Trump has EUR and US stock futures seeing red for a third consecutive open, following losses across Asia as Chinese and Hong Kong shares plunged after reopening following a holiday.

The move towards protectionism has rattled commodities and commodity-linked currencies like the AUD, CAD and NOK. Even emerging markets are taking a hit on the real possibility that a global trade war becomes a reality and not just tough talk.

Crude oil prices are also taking a hit, paring yesterday’s gain as the market weighs OPEC’s discussions on a compromise over increasing output ahead of this week’s key meeting in Vienna (June 22/23).

On tap: US building permits and housing starts (June 19), NZD GDP (June 20), SNB and BoE monetary policy decision (June 21), OPEC (June 22/23)

1. Stocks see red

Asia equities fell to a new four-month low as President Trump raises the stakes in Sino-US trade war. Trump threatened yesterday to impose an additional +10% tariff on +$200B of Chinese goods, disobeying negotiation and consensus reached previously between the two countries. This has prompted a swift warning of retaliation from China.

In Japan, stocks plummeted to a three-week low overnight and posted the biggest daily percentage drop in three-months after Chinese equities were aggressively sold amidst escalating global trade struggles. The Nikkei share average ended -1.8% lower, while the broader Topix shred -1.6%.

Down-under, Aussie stocks bucked the trend and added +0.1%, helped by a depreciating AUD and an overnight bounce in commodity prices. In S. Korea, the KOSPI depreciated -1.3%.

In Hong Kong, stocks closed at their lowest in more than four months, tracking other regional bourses dejected by escalating Sino-US trade frictions. The Hang Seng index closed down -2.8%, while the Hang Seng China Enterprise (CEI) lost -3.2%.

In China, Shanghai equities plummeted nearly -4% to a two-year low overnight on Trump’s fresh tariff threats that could escalate into a full-blown trade war. The Shanghai Composite Index finished the session down -3.8%, while the blue chip Shanghai Shenzhen CSI 300 index fell -3.6%.

In Europe, regional bourses trade sharply lower across the board following on from Asia’s losses.

US stocks are set to open deep in the “red” (-1.2%).

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Indices: STOXX 600 -0.9% at 32.6, FTSE -0.6% at 7587, DAX -1.5% at 12646, CAC 40 -1.2% at 5387, IBEX 35 -1.1% at 9658, FTSE MIB -0.8% at 21922, SMI -0.8% at 8452, S&P 500 Futures -1.2%