Economic Terrorism Has Equities And Bond Yields Under Pressure

 | May 30, 2019 11:34

Thursday May 30: Five things the markets are talking about

Euro equities are trading a tad higher along with U.S futures following a mixed session in Asia overnight as investors continue to assess all the warning signals for global growth amid the latest trade developments.

This Thursday, China has ramped up trade rhetoric aimed at Washington. Vice Foreign Minister Zhang Hanhui indicated that provoking trade disputes is “naked economic terrorism” and that they “opposed a trade war but are not afraid of a trade war.”

U.S Treasury yields are steady but do trade atop of their two-year low yields. The much-watched yield gap between U.S 3-month T-Bills and 10’s is sending a warning signal of impending recession now that it slid to a 12-year low yesterday.

Note: It’s a Bank holiday (Ascension Day) in Switzerland, Germany and France and market volumes are expected to be lower.

In FX, the ‘big’ dollar continues to trade near its five-month high, while the EUR and GBP are steady.

Crude prices have had a difficult week as Sino-U.S trade tensions reached the highest levels with China lining up their response to the additional tariffs from the U.S. Oil prices have been dragged down by growing expectations that OPEC+ may fail to agree upon when to meet next, and more importantly if they can agree on continuing productions, while filling the void from sanctioned stricken countries.

Today’s U.S revised GDP (08:30 am) should provide further clues on the health of the U.S economy while on Friday, the Fed’s preferred measure of inflation, core PCE Price Index, is released (08:30 am).

On tap: CH, Fr. and DE bank holiday, US preliminary GDP and CNY manufacturing PMI (May 30), CAD GDP and U.S core PCE Price Index (May 31).

h2 1. Stocks mixed results/h2

In Japan, the Nikkei share average closed at a 3-1/2-month low overnight, on growing anxiety that the Sino-U.S trade dispute will be prolonged and damaging to the economy. The Nikkei fell -0.29%, its lowest close since mid-February, while the broader Topix also slipped -0.29%.

Down-under, Aussie shares closed lower, led by commodity firms and weighed by fresh exchanges in the Sino-U.S. trade war that has hurt global investor appetite. The S&P/ASX 200 index finished -0.7% lower. The benchmark has lost -2% since it scaled a decade high last week. In S. Korea, the Kospi index rebounded from its -1.3% fall in the previous session to close higher on Thursday. The index ended up +0.77% higher.

In China, equities remained under pressure as trade war fears heightened after Beijing stepped up its rhetoric against Washington. The blue-chip CSI300 index fell -0.6%, while the Shanghai Composite Index lost -0.3%. In Hong Kong, stocks hit a four-month closing low as trade woes gather sentiment. The Hang Seng index ended down -0.4%, its lowest closing level since January 24, while the China Enterprises Index closed up +0.6%.

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In Europe, regional bourses have rebounded after yesterday steep losses, following higher U.S futures in a quieter day as certain European nations observe Ascension Day.

U.S stocks are set to open small in the ‘black’ (+0.31%).

Indices: STOXX 600 +0.35% at 371.82, FTSE +0.24% at 7,202.60, DAX +0.50% at 11,896.48, CAC-40 +0.47% at 5,246.75, IBEX 35 +0.79% at 9,151.85, FTSE MIB +0.37% at 20,074.50, SMI n/c, S&P 500 Futures +0.31%.

h2 2. Oil higher on declining U.S stocks, but trade war worries linger/h2

Oil prices are small better bid after U.S inventory reports showed a bigger-than-expected decline in crude stocks, although concerns that the Sino-U.S trade war will trigger a global economic downturn is capping gains.

Brent crude futures are at +$69.85 per barrel, up +40c, or +0.6%, from yesterday’s close. Brent fell nearly -1% on Wednesday. U.S West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures are up +48c, or +0.8%, at +$59.29 a barrel.