5 Things The Market Is Talking About: Pick Your Poison

 | Oct 19, 2018 11:25

Friday October 19: Five things the markets are talking about

Global concerns about rising yields, a deteriorating economic outlook and rising geopolitical tensions has capital markets closing out this volatile week on the back foot.

China’s slowing economic growth, Brexit and tensions between Rome and Brussels over the Italian budget are among the issues currently concerning investors. Also, throw into the mix – U.S/Saudi relations are worsening over the disappearance of journalist Jamal Khashoggi and investors are also waiting for November congressional elections in the U.S for guidance.

This Friday morning, Euro stocks are struggling as dealers weigh up corporate earnings against Chinese regulators whose rhetoric overnight promised to keep risks under control despite weaker economic headlines. This assurance saw China bourses rally from their four-year lows.

Elsewhere, Treasuries and the ‘big’ dollar are trading steady, while Italian debt comes under pressure as the E.U Commission responds to Italy draft budget plan with a stern rebuke – Italy plans are an “unprecedented” deviation from budget rules.

Oil prices have recovered a tad from their one-month lows after expanding U.S stockpiles surpassed tensions between the U.S and Saudi Arabia.

On Tap: Canadian CPI and retail sales are due at 08:30 am EDT.

1. Stocks mixed results

In Japan, the Nikkei ended the week in the ‘red,’ booking its third week of declines. The Nikkei share average at one stage dropped almost -2% intraday to hit a six-week low, however, by the closing bell, it was down -0.56%. The benchmark index has given up around -7.8%t since its 27-year peak print on Oct. 2.

Down-under, Aussie stocks edged lower overnight as China posted its weakest economic growth since the global financial crisis. The S&P/ASX 200 index eased -0.05%. The benchmark was up +0.7% for the week, snapping two straight weeks in the red. In S. Korea, the Kospi index recovered from early falls to close higher on the day. At the close, the index was up +0.37% after declining -1.4% earlier in the session. For the week, it slipped -0.3%, in its third consecutive weekly fall.

In China, regulators rushed to rally market confidence overnight as regional bourses traded atop of their four-year low on weaker economic data. China’s Q3 GDP y/y: +6.5% vs. +6.6%e (slowest growth since Q1 2009) and Sept. Industrial Production y/y: +5.8% vs. +6.0%e (slowest growth since 2016). Strong rhetoric managed to push the Shanghai index to close out +2.6% higher. Even with that, the index is still down -10% this month and nearly -25% on the year. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng index also had a volatile session, closing out the week +0.42% higher.

Get The App
Join the millions of people who stay on top of global financial markets with Investing.com.
Download Now

In Europe, regional bourses are trading mixed. Italy remains the primary focus after the E.U Commission sent a letter to Finance Minister Tria regarding budget violations.

U.S stocks are set to open in the ‘black’ (+0.1%).

Indices: Stoxx600 -0.4% at 11533, FTSE -0.1% at 7019, DAX -0.5% at 11531, CAC-40 -0.8% at 5077, IBEX-35 -0.7% at 8833, FTSE MIB -1.3% at 18846, SMI +0.2% at 8798, S&P 500 Futures +0.1%