5 Things Markets Are Talking About: Equities Sea Of Red

 | Oct 26, 2018 11:35

Asian equities hit 20-month lows overnight, while Euro stocks see red along with U.S futures as nervousness over corporate profits added to investors persistent fears about global trade and economic growth.

Treasuries are steady as the ‘big’ dollar edges higher ahead of today’s U.S Q3 GDP report (08:30 am EDT) – its expected to have slowed, yet remained near its best pace for the past three-years.

Central banks dominated proceedings this week, and they all followed the script, no change for ECB, CBRT, Riksbank and Norges, while the Bank of Canada (BoC) hiked +25 bps and removed ‘gradual’ from their statement – so we are back to data dependency.

Aside from ‘risk-on’ and ‘risk-off’ trading, rate differentials are the name of the game, and with USD/CHF trading atop of its three-month highs, and through parity, would suggest that rate differentials are currently winning out.

The EUR is under renewed pressure after the ECB acknowledged recent weakness being observed in the E.U data, but stressed it was too early to know if it was not largely being driven by “transitory” factors, whether they are “country-specific” or relate to the eurozone as a whole, and what is impacting consumer spending and what is not. So far, any spill over from Italy to the rest of the eurozone has been “limited.”

1. Stocks plummet again

In Japan, stocks posted their biggest weekly loss in nearly nine-months on growing worries over earnings of domestic firms. The Nikkei share average fell -0.40% overnight, taking the weekly loss to -5.7%. The broader Topix shed -0.31% to also end the week -5.7%.

Down-under, Aussie shares closed flat overnight, but ended the week in the ‘red.’ The S&P/ASX 200 index ended +0.02% up, but, for the week, the benchmark slumped -4.6%. In S. Korea, shares fell for a fourth consecutive session on domestic earnings worries, the Kospi index tumbled -1.75%, leading to a weekly decline of -5.99%.

In China, stocks slipped overnight but posted a weekly gain, supported by Government policies and measures to bolster the stock market and the real economy. The blue-chip CSI300 index fell -0.7%, while the Shanghai Composite Index ended down -0.2%. For the week, the CSI 300 index gained +1.2%, while SSEC was up +1.9%.

In Hong Kong, stocks fell on regional cues. The Hang Seng index fell -1.4% overnight, while the Hang Seng China Enterprise index fell -1.7%.

In Europe, regional bourses trade lower across the board led by a weaker tech sector after disappointing results after the NY close from Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) and Google (NASDAQ:GOOGL).

U.S stocks are set to open deep in the ‘red’ (-1%).

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Indices: STOXX 600 -1.5% at 349.9, FTSE -1.6% at 6897, DAX -1.8% at 11101, CAC-40 -2.0% at 4930, IBEX 35 -1.3% at 8668, FTSE MIB -1.7% at 18505, SMI -1.0% at 8620, S&P 500 Futures -1.0%