Syria Risks Offset Trade Truce

 | Apr 11, 2018 06:50AM ET

Wednesday April 11: Five things the markets are talking about

Ahead of the US open, European equities are under pressure following a mixed Asian session as capital markets weigh easing global trade tensions against the prospect of Euro/US military action in Syria.

The ‘big’ dollar continues to drift, while US debt prices edge a tad higher before this morning’s US inflation data and this afternoon’s FOMC (02:00 pm EDT) minutes.

Stateside, inflation pressures appear to be building according to yesterday’s producer-price report, a trend that could also be visible in today’s US consumer-price data (08:30 am EDT).

US PPI rose +3% last month from a year earlier, matching the largest increase since prices grew +3% last November. Ex-food and energy, the volatile trade services category grew +2.9%, the strongest y/y increase in nearly four-years.

The markets focus has now officially shifted towards geopolitical stress around Syria.

1. Stocks mixed session

In Japan, stocks fell for the first time in three-days overnight, following a strong rally Tuesday, but index-heavy Softbank (T:9984) rose on rumors that Sprint (NYSE:S) is in new talks to merge with T-Mobile (NASDAQ:TMUS). The Nikkei ended -0.5% lower, while the broader Topix declined -0.4%.

Down-under, Australian shares ended lower overnight as investors switched from the defensive sector to resource plays on strength in commodities after China spoke of further opening their economy and lowering tariffs. The S&P/ASX 200 index slipped -0.5%. In S. Korea, the KOSPI was -0.2% lower.

Shares in China and Hong Kong posted the biggest gains as PBoC Governor Yi Gang offered more details on pledges to open the Chinese economy. In Hong Kong, equities rallied for a fourth consecutive session. The Hang Seng index rose +0.6%, while the Hang Seng China Enterprise (CEI) was unchanged. In China, stocks also ended higher. The blue-chip Shanghai Shenzhen CSI 300 rose +0.3%, while the Shanghai Composite Index gained +0.6%.

In Europe, regional bourses are trading mostly lower across the board, consolidating some of their recent gains and tracking US futures lower following yesterday’s strong session.

US stocks are set to open in the ‘red’ (-0.5%).

Indices: STOXX 600 -0.2% at 377.6, FTSE -0.1% at 7261, DAX -0.3% at 12359, CAC 40 -0.3% at 5294, IBEX 35 +0.1% at 9777, FTSE MIB flat at 23182, SMI -0.2% at 8736, S&P 500 Futures -0.5%