Yield Curve Inversion Disappears, While Brexit Is Markets Biggest Worry

 | Apr 01, 2019 06:44AM ET

Monday April 1: Five things the markets are talking about

Will we see the same in Q2?

Optimism about trade talks amongst the world’s two largest economies coupled with the Fed signalling a temporary halt to interest-rate hikes pushed some stateside equity indexes to their best Q1 in a decade, and this despite investors grappling with slowing global growth and the uncertainties surrounding Brexit.

Better manufacturing data out of China over the weekend has helped push equity markets into to the ‘black’ on day one of a new quarter. With a plethora of central banks turning more supportive for markets by extending their expansionary monetary policies, a number of investors have been fearful of missing the move.

Note: The Caixin-Markit China manufacturing purchasing managers index rose in March above 50 to 50.8.

Inversion disappears

Providing more investor confidence is the fact that the yield on U.S 10-year Treasury’s has backed up +3 bps to +2.446%, climbing back above the yield on three-month T-Bills and ending the inversion of the yield curve that last week signalled the possibility of a recession in the market.

Brexit unknown

The U.K Parliament is expected to vote today on a short list of options for how the U.K could leave the E.U, including perhaps one that combines a customs union pact with a second referendum. There is talk of a possible third general election in four-years gathering steam. Minus a deal, Britain is set to crash out of the EU on April 12 with expected “dire financial consequences.”

On tap: U.S retail sales, U.S ISM manufacturing PMI & RBA rate statement (Apr 1), AUD Annual budget release, AUD retail sales & U.S core durable goods (Apr 2), U.K Parliament Brexit vote (Apr 3), CNY Bank holiday (Apr 4), CAD & U.S employment, AUD Parliamentary elections (Apr 5).

1. Stocks rally on strong Chinese data

In Japan, the Nikkei has rallied on day one of the new fiscal year overnight as hopes for Sino-U.S trade talk hopes and factory activity surveys lifted China-related stocks, helping to offset weak domestic corporate sentiment. The Nikkei share average ended +1.4% higher, while the broader Topix closed out +1.5% higher.

Down-under, Aussie shares closed at a three-week high overnight, after Chinese factory surveys on the weekend supported broader investor sentiment, with miners notching strong gains on firm iron ore prices. The S&P/ASX 200 index rose +0.59% at the close of trade. The benchmark was little changed on Friday. In S. Korea, the Kospi index gained +1.3%.

In China, stocks jumped overnight with the Shanghai Composite Index hitting its highest in 10 months, while blue-chips touched a 12-month peak, on signals of an economic recovery (see below) and the progress in Sino-U.S. trade talks. The Shanghai Composite and the blue-chip CSI300 indexes closed up +2.6%. While in Hong Kong, shares rose to their highest point in nine-months. At the close of trade, the Hang Seng index was up +1.8%.

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In Europe, regional indices trade higher across the board with positive PMI data out of China providing global equities the ‘bid.’

U.S stocks are set to open in the ‘black’ (+0.75%)

Indices: Stoxx600 +1.07% at 383.12, FTSE +0.89% at 7,343.76, DAX +1.39% at 11,686.44, CAC-40 +1.10% at 5,409.54, IBEX-35 +0.79% at 9,317.00, FTSE MIB +0.86% at 21,469.50, SMI +0.37% at 9,512.50, S&P 500 Futures +0.75%