Trumps Legal Woes Are Markets Center Of Attention

 | Aug 22, 2018 06:54AM ET

This morning U.S stock futures are under pressure, while both Europe and Asia equity sessions overnight traded mixed as investors try to guesstimate the potential fallout from President Trump’s latest legal drama.

Note: To date, capital markets has had to contend with three-trading themes – the impact of U.S tax cuts, a global trade war/protectionism and a plummeting emerging market – now investors have to deal with Trump’s future legal woes.

On the announcement of yesterday’s guilty plea from Trump’s former attorney, Michael Cohen, on Federal charges, initially sparked ‘mild’ demand for safe-haven assets, but further follow through in other sessions was not instigated. This morning, the ‘big’ dollar trades steady, so far, alongside U.S Treasuries.

The markets focus will now shift to today’s Fed minutes (02:00 pm EDT) – will investors be given more insight into monetary policy after Trump complained about a tighter U.S monetary policy this week?

It’s unlikely that this afternoon’s minutes will provide any new clues on how U.S interest rate policy is going to develop further. The Fed’s implied rate path – two further rate rises in 2018 and probably two more in 2019 – is mostly priced in.

Perhaps the U.S dollar ‘bull’ will have to wait for Fed Chair Powell’s speech at Jackson Hole symposium for clues on U.S rate policy, and for any response from Powell to Trump’s comments this week?

On Tap: Canadian retail sales (08:30 am EDT).

1. Stocks mixed reaction

In Japan, the Nikkei closed higher overnight supported by tech shares, which tracked gains in their U.S colleagues. The Nikkei share average gained +0.64%, while the broader Topix advanced +0.77%.

Note: Most investors have remained on the sidelines ahead of today’s Sino-U.S trade talks, which are expected to begin later this afternoon.

Down-under, Aussie shares ended lower overnight, weighed by materials and financials, as investors were wary of PM Turnbull’s precarious grip on power as he rejected resignations from seven cabinet members in a bid to head off a renewed leadership challenge. The PM was also forced to drop plans to cut company tax after parliament rejected the proposal. The ASX 200 finished down -0.3%. In S. Korea, the stock benchmark notched its first four-day winning streak since early June as it rode a rebound in the chip sector. The KOSPI rallied +0.1%.

In Hong Kong and following the U.S’s Tuesday’s lead, stocks closed higher for a fourth consecutive session overnight, despite investors waiting for the latest round of Sino-U.S trade talks. At close of trade, the Hang Seng index was up +0.65%, while the Hang Seng China Enterprises index rose +1.1%.

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In China, stocks fell overnight, weighed down by persistent economic concerns and worries over the outlook for trade ahead of lower-level talks in Washington today. The blue-chip CSI300 index fell -0.6%, while the Shanghai Composite Index ended down -0.7%.

In Europe, regional bourses trade mostly mixed – the DAX and CAC are trending higher after initial weaker open tracking lower U.S futures.

U.S stocks are set to open up in the ‘red’ (-0.2%).

Indices: Stoxx600 0.0% at 384.1, FTSE 0.0% at 7563, DAX +0.3% at 12425, CAC 40 +0.2% at 5419, IBEX 35 -0.1% at 9536, FTSE MIB +0.1% at 20813, SMI -0.5% at 9040 S&P 500 Futures -0.2%