Trump Trade Needs Healthcare

 | Mar 23, 2017 07:02AM ET

Thursday March 23: Five things the markets are talking about

This week’s global equities selloff has eased in the overnight session as the market steps back before today’s key U.S vote on Trump’s healthcare bill.

Market sentiment is being dictated to by this piece of legislation – the House votes this evening. The fact that the President is struggling to push his bill has raised raised doubts over whether he can win support for his pro-growth economic policy measures.

Press reports late Wednesday suggests that the White House is considering concessions to the right wing of the party to help the bill through the house.

This is the markets litmus test – if the healthcare bill does actually stall, the Trump ‘reflation’ trade will again come under threat – stocks, yields and dollar lower.

Note: The timing of this evening’s vote has not been set.

1. Global stocks see mixed results

This week’s equity selloff was the biggest for stocks since the November U.S election. To date, they have largely escaped the markets efforts this year to unwind the “Trump trade.”

Note: While the dollar has fallen -4.4% ytd, global stocks have climbed to new record highs.

In Japan, the Nikkei edged a tad higher overnight (+0.2%), up from its two-month low, as support from a weaker yen (yesterday’s ¥110.75 print was a four -month low) helped offset a political scandal centered on PM Abe’s wife. The broader Topix was little changed.

In Hong Kong, benchmark stock index struggled as strength in Chinese real estate developers was offset by weakness in some blue chips – earnings reports disappointed. The Hang Seng ended flat. The index is up +10% ytd and market is questioning valuations.

In China, stocks rebounded, but gains are being capped with more mainland money flowing into Hong Kong through trading links. The CSI 300 blue-chip index rose +0.4%, while the Shanghai Composite Index gained +0.3%.

In Europe, equity indices are trading mixed, as market participants remain nervous after the recent terror attack in London yesterday. Banking stocks are leaning on the Euro Stoxx 50, while energy, commodity and mining stocks trade in the FTSE 100.

U.S stocks are set to open in the black (+0.2%).

Indices: Stoxx50 -0.1% at 3,420, FTSE flat at 7,322, DAX +0.2% at 11,925, CAC 40 -0.1% at 4,989, IBEX-35 +0.1% at 10,235, FTSE MIB +0.2% at 19,999, SMI +0.2% at 8,581, S&P 500 Futures +0.2%