Trumps Road To 100 Days Of Inaction Rattles Markets

 | Mar 27, 2017 06:56AM ET

Monday March 27: Five things the markets are talking about

Investors are questioning Trump’s reflation trade now that the U.S healthcare reform bill failed to make it onto the ‘floor’ Friday.

Heightened political risk has the market worried that the GOP’s failure to get Friday’s bill across the finish line will inhibit other pro-business reform agenda items from the White House, namely tax reform and fiscal spending measures.

Risk aversion has the dollar printing four-month lows outright, global equities and yields extending Friday’s slide and the go-to safe haven asset, gold, rallying more that $17 overnight.

Will this rift between Trump and GOP congressional leadership still widen? There is a very good chance of this happening making Trump a ‘lame duck’ in his first 100 days in the White house.

Note: Trump has promised to lower individual middle class taxes, while House leaders view tax reform as a catalyst for growth and could prioritize tax cuts for the top +1%.

Elsewhere, it’s a heavy week on the data front. Japan releases its key monthly statistics for February including retail sales and household spending, unemployment, consumer prices and industrial production.

France and Germany post consumer-spending data. Both the U.K and U.S report final estimates of Q4 GDP, while U.K’s PM Theresa May is expected to formally begin divorce proceedings and trigger Article 50 to begin two-years of negotiations on her country’s exit from the E.U.

1. Global stocks stumble on U.S policy woes

Trump’s failure on healthcare reform is raising questions about his ability to push through tax cuts and fiscal spending to boost the U.S economy.

In Japan, the Nikkei's share average fell -1.4% overnight, trading atop its six-week low, adding to last week’s -1.3% loss, on pressure from a resurgent yen (¥111.19). The broader Topix was down -1.3%.

In Hong-Kong, China developers have dragged down HK shares after fresh property curbs, offsetting data showing strong profit growth for industrial companies early in the year. The Hang Seng index fell -0.7%, while the China Enterprises Index lost -1.1%.

In China, stocks slipped as tightening worries have offset strong industrial profits. The blue-chip CSI 300 index fell -0.3%, while the Shanghai Composite Index shed -0.1%.

In Europe, equity indices are trading sharply lower. Banking stocks see red on the Eurostoxx, while commodity and mining stocks trading notably lower on the FTSE 100.

U.S stocks futures are to open deep in the red (-0.9%).

Indices: Stoxx50 -0.5% at 3,426, FTSE -0.8% at 7,280, DAX -0.8% at 11,967, CAC 40 -0.5% at 4,996, IBEX 35 -0.6% at 10,246, FTSE MIB -0.8% at 20,024, SMI -0.6 % at 8,561, S&P 500 Futures -0.9%

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