Sterling Braces For Wild Moves After Cabinet Meeting

 | Nov 14, 2018 06:27AM ET

Wednesday November 14: Five things the markets are talking about

European stocks have started today’s session deep in the ‘red,’ beating losses in Asia overnight and U.S futures, as the market considers the ongoing rout in oil market and a mixed bag of data on China’s economy and the latest trade developments.

Crude oil prices have extended their steep slide on market worries about weakening world demand and oversupply, while global stocks slumped as energy sector worries increased concern about a slow down in the global economy.

The U.S dollar trades within striking distance of its 18-month highs, while safe haven demand has Treasury and G7 sovereign yields under pressure. Italian yields also eased away from this morning’s high print despite Italy’s populist government standing firm on budget yesterday.

Sterling remains currency traders’ main focus as traders wait to see if PM Theresa May can persuade cabinet colleagues to back her Brexit plans today. The PM is due to meet her cabinet at 09:00 am EDT. The meeting is expected to last several hours.

If the Cabinet rejects the deal today, this would likely see the pound plummet (£1.2916), as it would not only mean prolonged uncertainty regarding the terms of the U.K’s exit from the E.U, but also increase the probability of a new general election.

On tap: U.S CPI is expected to have rebounded last month after easing in September (08:30 am EDT). Later this evening, Fed Chair Powell discusses national and global economic issues with Dallas Fed President Kaplan (06:00 pm EDT).

1. Stocks see mostly red

Most Asian stocks finished lower overnight as global growth worries persisted and Italy’s populist government escalated a row with the E.C over the country’s spending plans.

The outlier was in Japan, shares ended another volatile session a tad higher as tech companies and electronic component makers surged on short covering. The Nikkei average inched up +0.2%, rebounding from its two-week low print on Monday. The broader Topix index also closed +0.2% higher.

Down-under, financials and commodity stocks led declines in Aussie shares, pressured by concerns of slowing growth. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 index slipped for a second consecutive session, closing -1.7% down. The benchmark closed -1.8% lower on Tuesday.

In S. Korea, the KOSPI index weakened overnight due to a further fall in oil prices. Domestic investors were also cautious ahead of the financial regulator’s decision on alleged accounting rule violation by drug maker Samsung BioLogics (KS:005930). The index closed down -0.15%.

In China and Hong Kong, shares fell after the release of mixed economic data. The benchmark Shanghai Composite index dropped -0.9%, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index ended down -0.5%.

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Note: Industrial production in China rose an annual +5.9% in October, exceeding market expectations for +5.8%. Retail sales climbed +8.6% y/y, missing forecasts for a gain of +9.2%, while fixed asset investment advanced an annual +5.7%, beating forecasts for +5.5%.

In Europe, regional bourses trade lower across the board continuing the volatility seen in recent weeks tracking lower Asian markets and weaker U.S futures this morning.

U.S stocks are set to open in the ‘red’ (-0.3%).

Indices: STOXX 600 -0.6% at 362.2, FTSE -0.5% at 7018, DAX -0.6% at 11402, CAC 40 -0.7% at 5066, IBEX 35 -0.6% at 9095, FTSE MIB -1.2% at 19000, SMI -0.6% at 8960, S&P 500 Futures -0.3%