Trade Spat Fallout To Direct Markets

 | Apr 09, 2018 07:00AM ET

Monday April 9: Five things the markets are talking about

This week, the Fed and the European Central Bank (ECB) release minutes of their latest meetings, and China reports import, export (Friday) and inflation data (Tuesday).

Last Friday, Fed Chair Powell reaffirmed the central bank’s slow and steady path of raising interest rates. The March meeting minutes likely will reflect plans to continue this pace. U.S CPI data and FOMC minutes are due Wednesday.

China’s consumer inflation likely retreated in March from a more than four-year high in February as the Lunar New Year holiday effects waned. The market expects CPI to rise by about +2.6% in March y/y, compared with February’s +2.9%. The country’s PPI probably rose about +3.2%, easing from February’s +3.7%.

On Thursday, the Bank of Mexico releases a policy statement on the heels of a strengthening MXN – in late March, the peso was the best amongst the G20 pairs. In its last policy statement, the bank left the door ajar for an additional rate increase. The ECB will release minutes of its March 7-8 meeting, when it signalled a shift toward tighter monetary policy by dropping a long-held pledge to accelerate its bond-buying program if the region’s economy deteriorates.

Note: Attention now turns to China’s Boao Forum (Tuesday), where President Xi is among senior officials scheduled to speak. Markets waits for any reference to trade.

1. Stocks in the black

Despite continued sabre-rattling on trade over the weekend between Washington and Beijing, Asia and Europe’s major bourses rallied again overnight as we head into Q1’s U.S earnings season.

In Japan, stocks recovered from the previous session’s drop and edged a tad higher, lifted by defensive shares. Despite ongoing concerns about an U.S/China trade spat, a rise in U.S stock futures has helped calm sentiment for now. The Nikkei ended the day up +0.5%, while the broader Topix rallied +0.35%.

Down-under, Aussie stocks rallied on Monday, with the health care sector and consumer staples helping to cool nervousness over an escalating U.S/China trade spat. The S&P/ASX 200 index gained +0.4%, its third gain in four sessions. It was little changed on Friday. In S. Korea, the KOSPI was up +0.6%.

In Hong Kong, stocks rallied on hopes that the U.S and China can reach a deal to avoid trade war. The Hang Seng index rose +1.3%, while the China Enterprises Index gained +0.9%.

In China, stocks were tepid as investors pondered global trade developments. At the close, the Shanghai Composite index was up +0.3%, while the blue-chip CSI300 index was down -0.1%.

In Europe, regional indices trade higher across the board extending its two-week rally as worries over a potential global trade war fade.

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

Indices: Stoxx600 +0.5% at 376.6, FTSE +0.1% at 7192, DAX +0.9% at 12352, CAC 40 +0.4% at 5280, IBEX-35 +0.9% at 9770, FTSE MIB +0.6% at 23070, SMI +0.8% at 8739, S&P 500 Futures +0.7%