The Dollar's Demise

 | Nov 15, 2017 06:32AM ET

Wednesday November 15: Five things the markets are talking about

Market risk-off continues to dominate capital market moves; both European and Asian stocks have seen ‘red’ in their sessions while bonds and gold prices advanced.

The dollar has fallen to its lowest level in nearly three weeks overnight, reflecting the diminishing expectations that Republicans will be able to push through a tax overhaul this year.

Investors attention now turns to data coming out of the U.S. this morning – consumer prices and retail sales (08:30 am EDT) should provide clues on the strength of the world’s largest economy after the ‘flattest’ U.S. Treasury yield curve in a decade is raising concern that growth will slow.

1. Stocks see ‘red’

In Japan, the Nikkei share average fell to a new two-week low overnight, with all sectors in negative territory as investors took profits following a two-month rally that pushed the index up by about +20%. The index ended down -1.6%, while the broader Topix closed -2% to seal its longest streak of losses since September 2016.

Down-under, Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index declined -0.6% and the KOSPI index in Seoul was down -0.3%.

In Hong Kong, stocks followed other Asian markets lower, dragged down by resources and industrial firms, amid worries over China’s economic growth after sluggish economic data. The Hang Seng index fell -1.0%, while the China Enterprises Index lost -1.6%.

In China, stocks extended their losses, hurt by resources shares amid signs of a slowdown in industrial production. The blue-chip CSI 300 index fell -0.6%, while the Shanghai Composite Index dropped -0.8%.

In Europe, regional indices trade lower across the board following on from weakness in Asia. Softer commodity prices are weighing on miners after weaker Japanese GDP (+0.3% vs. +0.4%) and downbeat Chinese economic data.

In the U.S, stocks are set to open in the ‘red’ (-0.5%).

Indices: STOXX 600 -0.8% at 380.8, FTSE -0.5% at 7375, DAX -1.0% at 12898, CAC 40 -0.5% at 5287, IBEX 35 -0.8% at 9911, FTSE MIB -1.0% at 22084, SMI -0.7% at 9065, S&P 500 Futures -0.5%