Stocks, Dollar And Yields Feel Geopolitical, Economic Pressure

 | Apr 17, 2017 08:00AM ET

Monday April 17: Five things the markets are talking about

Global equities and the ‘mighty’ dollar have again dipped overnight while U.S Treasury yields have fallen to new five-month lows after soft U.S data on Friday hurts investor sentiment already in distress by worries over North Korea and upcoming French elections.

Note: U.S. retail sales dropped more than expected in March (+0.0% vs. +0.2%) while annual core inflation slowed to +2.0%, the smallest advance since November 2015, from +2.2% in Feb.

A raft of Chinese economic data (see below) beat market expectations, but did not produce a notable market reactions, as investors had been already optimistic following a recent string of positive China numbers.

In Turkey, President Erdogan snatched a victory in a referendum Sunday to grant him sweeping powers in the biggest overhaul of modern Turkish politics.

Note: Markets in Australia, New Zealand and Hong Kong, as well as most European exchanges, are closed for Easter Monday.

1. Global equities under pressure

Stock markets across Asia ended mostly lower overnight, as China’s securities regulator urged tighter supervision of listed companies, while geopolitical tensions in Korea continued to discourage investors from buying.

Japan’s Nikkei Stock Average opened lower, but later recouped the declines to end up +0.1%, snapping a four-session losing streak – the yen (¥108.76) spiked to new yearly highs (¥108.13).

In China, investor market sentiment has worsened over an escalating regulatory crackdown on stock manipulation, despite stronger-than-expected economic data for the Q1. The Shanghai Composite Index ended down -0.7%, while the Shenzhen Composite Index lost -1.4%.

Elsewhere, Singapore’s Straits Times Index lost -0.9%, while Taiwan’s Taiex ended down -0.2%.

In Turkey, the Borsa Istanbul 100 Index climbed +0.6% – the highest level in more than two-years after President Erodgan’s referendum victory yesterday (see below).

In Europe, markets remain closed due to Easter Monday holiday.

U.S stocks are set to open in the ‘red’ (-0.1%).