Global Growth, Brexit Fears Dominate Proceedings

 | Dec 10, 2018 12:01

Monday December 10: Five things the markets are talking about

**PM MAY SAID TO CANCEL PLANNED TUESDAY’S MEANINGFUL VOTE IN PARLIAMENT**

Global equities remain under pressure, extending last week’s losses amid a potential escalation between the world’s two largest economies, and after signs China’s economy remains under pressure.

Dampening investor sentiment was weak data on China’s slowing economy and news the China had summoned the U.S and Canadian ambassadors to protest the arrest of Huawei CFO. The euro remains better bid on pullbacks and the dollar trades mixed while U.S Treasuries and European sovereign bonds are little changed.

Note: Data on the weekend showed that China’s trade balance slowed as impact of trade tensions starts to show; CPI rose to +2.2% vs. +2.4%e in November while PPI came inline.

Because of the holiday-shortened month, flash PMI’s for December will be released this week. The European Central Bank (ECB) meets Thursday, while tomorrow is the big day in the U.K — Parliament votes on Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit plan, which is not expected to pass.

Note: PM May is deciding whether to risk a defeat or to postpone the vote.

Data in Europe this morning showed that investor morale in the eurozone slumped to a four-year low in December as fears about trade conflicts, Italy’s budget row with the E.U and Brexit led to a collapse in sentiment.

Elsewhere, oil prices are steady after Friday’s rally triggered by OPEC and its allies agreeing on production cuts.

On tap: The U.K Parliament will vote on the E.U divorce deal tomorrow. The ECB is set to cap asset purchases at its final policy meeting this year on Thursday, while China industrial production, retail sales data for November is due Friday.

1. Stocks see red

In Japan, stocks tumbled to a six-week low overnight as a deeper-than-expected domestic economic contraction in Q3 and a sharp sell-off last week stateside-depressed investor sentiment. Sino-U.S. trade tensions continue to hurt global stocks and push the Nikkei down -2.1% – the lowest closing level since Oct. 29. The broader Topix fell -1.9%.

Note: Japan’s benchmark index has lost -13.2% from its three decade high in early October. Data overnight showed that Q3 GDP fell -2.5% in the final release compared to the preliminary reading of -1.2%. The downward revision was driven by a drop in private capital expenditures.

Down-under, Aussie shares closed atop of their two-year lows overnight as investors turned risk-averse on concerns over Sino-U.S trade tensions and slowing global growth, with the healthcare and financial indexes recording the biggest losses. The S&P/ASX 200 index closed down -2.3%. In S. Korea, the Kospi closed down -1.06%, pressured by shares of Samsung Electronics (LON:0593xq) which fell -1.8%, hitting its lowest close in 19-months.

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In China, stocks ended lower overnight as disappointing November trade and inflation data added to concerns over slowing growth, and as the arrest of the Huawei CFO increased investor worries that the Sino-U.S trade war could escalate. At the close, the Shanghai Composite index was down -0.8%, while the blue-chip CSI300 index was down -1.2%.

In Hong Kong, shares ended lower for a fourth consecutive session on Monday, at the close, the Hang Seng index was down -1.2%, while the China Enterprises index lost -0.9%.

In Europe, regional bourses trade lower across the board, tracking weaker U.S markets on Friday and lower futures this morning as geopolitical tensions continue to weigh.

U.S stocks are set to open in the ‘red’ (-0.4%).

Indices: Stoxx600 -0.88% at 342.42, FTSE -0.47% at 6,746.25, DAX -0.66% at 10,716.38, CAC-40 -0.58% at 4,784.99, IBEX-35 -0.60% at 8,762.35, FTSE MIB -0.50% at 18,648.50, SMI -0.91% at 8,642.50, S&P 500 Futures -0.40%