Stocks Decline On Trade Worries; Oil Rallies

 | Jun 27, 2018 07:30AM ET

Wednesday June 27: Five things the markets are talking about

Lingering concerns about trade is keeping global equities muted, although gains in oil prices have been supporting stocks of oil-and-gas companies.

Crude prices have built on yesterday’s gains after the U.S. stepped up its pressure on Iran. West Texas Intermediate crude is trading atop of a one-month high, as Washington demanded that Iran’s customers halt imports.

In currencies, China’s yuan appears to have found a temporary floor after its rapid decline this week, while Japan’s yen is again attempting to outperform it G10 counterparts, while sovereign bonds are found wanting.

On tap: RBNZ monetary policy decisions is this afternoon (05:00 pm EDT), while U.S personal spending is expected to have increased for a third consecutive month on Friday. On Saturday, China manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMI are due.

1. Stocks see red

Asian stocks closed lower across the board after Chinese equities fell into a ‘bear’ market yesterday.

In Japan, the Nikkei share average dropped overnight after higher oil prices hurt rubber products makers, airlines and shippers, while companies’ going ex-dividend added to the market’s broader weakness. The benchmark Nikkei closed down -0.3%, while the broader TOPIX eked out a small gain of +0.02%.

Down-under, Aussie stocks faded late and left the S&P/ASX 200 with a fourth-straight decline of -0.03%. S Korea, both the KOSPI and won collapsed overnight as the escalating U.S-China trade conflict dented investor sentiment. The index was down -0.38%.

In Hong Kong and China, stocks also fell to trade atop of their seven-month lows as the Yuan’s slide adds to China growth fears. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng index fell -1.8%, while the China Enterprises Index lost -2.2%.

In China, the CSI300 index fell -1.2%, while the Shanghai Composite Index lost -0.5%.

Note: China’s yuan weakened beyond the psychologically $6.600 level and bets are growing for further downside amid the escalating Sino-U.S trade row.

In Europe, regional bourses remain under pressure as concerns over trade remain the theme of the risk off sentiment in markets.

U.S stocks are set to open in the ‘red’ (-0.7%).

Indices: Stoxx 50 -0.9% at 3,344, FTSE 100 -0.3% at 7,520, DAX -0.6% at 12,158, CAC 40 -0.6% at 5,249; IBEX 35 -1.2% at 9,521, FTSE MIB -1.0% at 21,195, SMI -1.2% at 8,376, S&P 500 Futures -0.7%