Rise In U.K Services PMI Lifts Pound, USD In Demand

 | Mar 05, 2019 07:04AM ET

Tuesday March 5: Five things the markets are talking about

Global equities were mixed overnight as investors digested Chinese tax cuts and lower growth forecasts while awaiting for details on a possible China-U.S trade deal.

U.S Treasuries are steady while the ‘big’ dollar edges a tad higher for a fifth consecutive session.

At China’s National People’s Congress, authorities lowered its 2019 economic growth target to a range of +6.0-6.5% amid rising concerns over a downturn in the world’s second largest economy and will aim for consumer inflation of +3% this year and a fiscal deficit of +2.8%.

In commodities, gold has slid for a seventh consecutive session, its longest slump in two-years, while crude oil prices creeped a tad lower.

In FX, the AUD (A$0.7083) temporarily fell to a three-week low after the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) left its benchmark interest rate unchanged overnight as expected.

On tap: RBA Governor Lowe will give a speech on the Aussie housing market Wednesday, while BoC is expected to keep rates on hold due to uncertainty on housing and investment while sticking to Governor Poloz's message that borrowing costs eventually needs to head higher. On Thursday, the ECB is expected to leave rates unchanged amid a deteriorating outlook.

1. Stocks mixed results

In Japan, the Nikkei eased from its three-month peak as chip, machinery firms slide and after China cut its economic growth target, hurting companies with large exposures to the world’s second largest economy. The index ended -0.4% lower, while the broader Topix dropped -0.5%.

Down-under, Aussie shares ended lower overnight, but trimmed deeper losses, after the RBA signalled a steady policy outlook and China said it would introduce further measures to aid its ‘cooling’ economy. The S&P/ASX 200 index finished down -0.3% after rallying +0.4% on Monday. In S. Korea, the Kospi stock index (-0.5%) fell for a third consecutive session as China cut in growth target. There is also investor uncertainty over the Sino-U.S trade deal.

In China, stocks rallied overnight after Beijing unveiled plans to cut taxes and increase public expenditure and lending to support a slowing economy. At the close, the Shanghai Composite index was up +0.9%, while the blue-chip CSI300 index rose +0.6%.

However, in Hong Kong, the equity market was little changed. At the close of trade, the Hang Seng index was flat, while the Hang Seng China Enterprises index rose less than +0.1%.

In Europe, regional bourses trade mostly higher across the board following a mixed session in Asia and higher U.S futures. More positive European Services PMI (Beats: Eurozone, Germany, France, Spain & Italy) has offset weaker China Caixin Services PMI which hit a four-month low.

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U.S stocks are set to open higher (+0.23%).

Indices: Stoxx600 +0.16% at 375.68, FTSE +0.36% at 7,159.91, DAX +0.23% at 11,618.92, CAC-40 +0.17% at 5,295.79, IBEX-35 +0.25% at 9,283.00, FTSE MIB +0.28% at 20,775.50, SMI +0.14% at 9,402.50, S&P 500 Futures +0.23%