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Investors Lose Appetite Amid HK Paralysis, Soft Chinese Data

Published 14/11/2019, 06:41
Updated 25/04/2018, 09:10

Hong Kong continues boiling as protests ratcheted up another notch with a complete paralysis of the city amid fear and uncertainty about when and how the unrest would ease. Subway and roads are blocked, schools are closed.

Stocks in Hong Kong fell as much as 1.82% to a month low, as the social unrest has been taking a toll on city’s businesses since twenty-three consecutive weeks and no one is able to tell what is next, other than that there is a stronger case for a Chinese intervention.

Meanwhile investors are worried that the US and China may not seal a trade deal next month, as there appears to be some misunderstanding regarding the farm product purchases. Donald Trump claims that China agreed to buy up to $50 billion worth of US farm products including soybean and pork, but China doesn’t want to sign off on an explicit number to give itself the freedom to stop purchases if things go wrong, again. At this point, we can only rely on Donald Trump’s unilateral announcement that a deal could happen ‘soon’. How soon is anybody’s guess. The leading risk for the market is that stretched negotiations could bring along renewed tariff threats and spoil the mood.

On the other hand, the Chinese industrial production slowed to 4.7% in October from 5.8% printed a month earlier. A seasonal slowdown in October production is normal due to the Golden Week break, but this year’s decline has been well above the 5.4% expected by analysts. Likewise, retail sales declined to 7.2% during the same month from 7.8% expected and printed a month earlier. Fixed asset growth slowed from 5.4% to 5.2% and property investment eased from 10.5% to 10.3% hinting that the slowdown is now felt in every layer of the economic data.

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Shanghai’s Composite traded flat, as weak economic data revived the expectation of further support from the People’s Bank of China.

Nikkei (-0.24%) and Topix (-0.49%) edged lower in Tokyo, as yen strengthened on safe-haven demand.

Gold remained capped at $1465 an ounce, as risk averse investors preferred buying sovereign bonds. Australian 10-year yield eased 8.3 points, as Japan’s 10-year yield fell 1.1 points.

Oil extended gains on lower US inventories after the API reported a 541’000-barrel weekly decline on Tuesday. The more official EIA data is due today. The expectation is a 1.5-million-barrel rise in US stockpiles versus 7.9-million-barrel increase a week earlier. WTI and Brent crude gained in Asia despite gloomy Chinese data and mounting fear that the US and China may not sign a much-expected deal before the end of this year.

Disney+ picks up 10 million subscribers since Tuesday launch

US stock indices treaded water following a lackluster session in New York, except for the Dow.

The Dow Jones hit a new record on Wednesday, boosted by a 7.32% rally in Walt Disney (NYSE:DIS) shares as the family-friendly company’s new video-streaming service Disney+ attracted 10 million subscribers after its Tuesday launch. As such, the remarkable inauguration of Disney+ dropped a bombshell in the video-streaming industry. Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX) plunged 3.05%, Discovery erased 2.80%, as CBS and Viacom declined 2.41% and 2.24% respectively.

USD consolidates gains as Jay Powell sticks to a neutral policy stance, euro falls

The consumer price inflation in the US advanced to 1.8% y-o-y in October from 1.7% printed a month earlier, but the core inflation unexpectedly eased on cooling rent costs. Mixed data combined with Jay Powell’s neutral policy stance kept the doves unalert.

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The US dollar gained against most G10 currencies, the Aussie and the Kiwi softened on fading risk appetite.

The euro dipped below the 1.10 mark against the greenback, despite a better-than-expected industrial production performance in October. The 1.10 handle is where the bears fight the weakening bulls.

Due today, the Eurozone GDP is expected to have grown 0.2% in the third quarter, which sums up to a meager 1.1% growth on yearly basis. We are at a point where even a better-than-expected figure is too low to boost enthusiasm. Therefore, it is just a matter of time before the single currency slips below the disputed 1.10 mark. Put options should give a hand to the bears below the 1.1020 mark at today’s expiry.

Pound traders rely on a strong sales data to boost purchases

Across the channel, cable holds on to its gains above the 1.2820 mark. Released yesterday, the softer-than-expected inflation read revived the Bank of England (BoE) doves and intensified the selling pressure on the pound amid the forthcoming snap election uncertainties.

But there is a solid support into the 1.28-handle, which factors in the rising likelihood of a Conservative victory and an orderly Brexit in the coming months.

Due today, solid retail sales data could lend a further support to the buy-side, if the October figures confirm a 3.4% increase in British retail sales excluding automobiles, and a 3.7% rise including automobiles versus 3.0% and 3.1% printed a month earlier. Resistance is eyed prior to 1.29 against the US dollar, stops are eyed above.

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In the derivatives market, call options trail above the 1.29 mark and a large 1.30 call option will expire today.

In other words, a move above the 1.29-resistance against the greenback should encourage a further advance toward the 1.30 mark.

FTSE set for a soft open.

The FTSE had the support of a softer pound on Wednesday, but financials and real estate sectors weighed on gains as HSBC alone shred 11 points off the index after the S&P downgraded its outlook to negative.

FTSE futures hint at a soft start to Thursday’s session. The rise in oil prices could lend some support to the energy-heavy British blue-chip index near the 7300p support.

Disclaimer: The information and comments provided herein under no circumstances are to be considered an offer or solicitation to invest and nothing herein should be construed as investment advice. The information provided is believed to be accurate at the date the information is produced. CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. Please note that 79 % of our retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing money.

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