U.K. GDP And U.S. Durable Goods Due As Geopolitics Come Back To The Spotlight

 | May 25, 2018 04:00AM ET

Here are the latest developments in global markets:

· FOREX: The US dollar index – which tracks the greenback’s performance against a basket of six major currencies – is nearly 0.2% higher on Friday, ahead of a speech by Fed Chairman Jerome Powell. The index pulled back a little yesterday, mirroring a similar dip in longer-term US Treasury yields.

· STOCKS: US markets closed lower on Thursday, as news that President Donald Trump had cancelled his summit with North Korea weighed on risk sentiment. The Dow Jones fell by 0.30%, while the NASDAQ Composite and S&P 500 declined by 0.21% and 0.20% respectively. That said, sentiment seems to have reversed following a plea from North Korea overnight for a meeting “at any time”, with futures tracking the Dow, S&P, and NASDAQ 100 all pointing to a higher open today. In Asia, Japan’s Nikkei 225 ticked up by 0.06%, but the TOPIX edged down 0.22%. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng fell 0.47%. Meanwhile in Europe, futures tracking the major indices were a sea of green, pointing to a notably higher open for all benchmarks today.

· COMMODITIES: Oil prices tumbled yesterday and are lower today as well, amid hints from major producers that they may “open the taps” soon and increase production. WTI is down by nearly 0.35% on Friday and Brent by 0.45%, after Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak hinted on Thursday that the OPEC & non-OPEC supply cuts may be slowly phased out after next month’s OPEC meeting. In precious metals, gold is down by almost 0.2% today, giving back some of the gains it posted yesterday following the cancellation of the US-North Korea summit. Prices surged to break back above the psychological $1300 mark but remain stuck below the crucial 200-day moving average, which keeps the technical picture cautiously negative for now.