Stocks In Free-Fall, U.S. Dollar Is King, Yields Lower

 | May 23, 2019 06:57AM ET

Thursday May 23: Five things the markets are talking about

U.S equity futures and European bourses are again under pressure, following Asian stocks lower, as Sino-U.S trade tensions show little sign of easing. The street is now officially worried that what started as a ‘tiff over tariffs’ is turning into a full-blown trade war. U.S Treasuries are steady while the ‘big’ dollar remains King.

Yesterday’s FOMC minutes showed that U.S policy makers are broadly comfortable with their current “make-no-moves” posture. A number of officials said they thought the Fed might need to raise rates because they expected tight labour markets to eventually lead wages and prices to rise, while others thought there was more labour slack than implied by the unemployment rate, at +3.8% in April.

In FX, the pound has extended its losses amid a “growing revolt over Brexit” that looks increasingly likely to force PM Theresa May from power sooner rather than later. Europe’s single unit, the EUR is steady as voting gets underway in Day 1 of the European elections. While crude oil comes under pressure from inventory data and commodities from a “grinding trade war.”

On tap: Fr. & Gr. flash services & manufacturing PMI, Day 1 EUR parliamentary elections (May 23), GBP retail sales, Day 2 EUR parliamentary elections & U.S durable goods (May 24), Day 3 EUR parliamentary elections (May 25).

1.Stocks sea of red, except for India

In Japan, the Nikkei dropped overnight after renewed U.S-China trade tensions dragged down tech stocks, while index-heavyweight SoftBank Group fell more than -5%. The Nikkei share average ended -0.6% lower, while the broader Topix lost -0.4%.

Note: SoftBank Group, which has a stake in Sprint, fell on news that the U.S Justice Department’s have recommended the agency blocks T-Mobile US Inc’s +$26B acquisition of smaller rival Sprint.

Down-under, Aussie shares ended lower, ending six consecutive sessions of gains, on concerns U.S-China trade frictions were spilling into the tech sector. The S&P/ASX 200 index fell -0.3%. The benchmark rose +0.2% on Wednesday. In S. Korea, The Kospi index closed down -0.26%.

The outlier in Asia, Indian shares hit a record high overnight as results showed that the incumbent Modi-led coalition is leading in most seats in the lower house of Parliament and is set to win re-election.

In China, the blue-chip stock index dropped to a three-month low, as investors dumped tech names amid worries that Chinese tech firms could bear the brunt of an escalating trade war. The blue-chip CSI300 index fell -1.8%,while the Shanghai Composite Index lost -1.4%.

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In Europe, regional bourses have declined sharply across the board led by losses in the auto and tech sector amid weaker than expected PMI data from Germany and Eurozone and German IFO Business Climate release.

U.S stocks are set to open deep in the ‘red’ (-0.8%).

Indices: Stoxx600 -1.24% at 374.50, FTSE -1.07% at 7,255.83, DAX -1.58% at 11,976.78, CAC-40 -1.54% at 5,296.19, IBEX-35 -1.24% at 9,121.00, FTSE MIB -1.54% at 20,255.50, SMI -0.53% at 9,593.80, S&P 500 Futures -0.75%