5 Things Markets Are Talking About: Pound Sterling In The Shop Window

 | Apr 03, 2019 11:49

Global equities are better bid in the overnight session on renewed optimism that China and the U.S would reach a deal as trade talks resume in Washington.

According to a FT report today, the world’s two largest economies are “still at odds on carrying out and enforcing a deal, while most other roadblocks were cleared.” Investor sentiment has also improved on a better-than-forecast increase in a gauge of China’s services industries and on stronger Aussie retail sales data in the overnight session.

Sterling (£1.3175) has rallied for a third consecutive session as PM Theresa May announced a cross-party approach to break the impasse in parliament over Brexit. Yesterday she indicated she would look for Labour support for a new Brexit deal. However, there is no guarantee that Labour and the PM would agree terms on the Brexit path, nevertheless, the fact that she is willing to cross the floor is a clear shift in her party’s stance towards a ‘softer’ Brexit.

PM May still insists that her withdrawal agreement – which was voted down last week – would remain part of the deal. The U.K requires an extension and PM May has said she wanted the extension to be “as short as possible” – before 22 May so the UK does not have to take part in European elections.

The UK has until 12 April to propose a plan – which must be accepted by the EU – or it will leave without a deal.

On tap: U.S services and ISM non-manufacturing PMI (09:45 am EDT), Reserve Bank of India (RBI) will set policy tomorrow, and Friday’s NFP is expected to show a headline print of +180k for March after February’s miss, while Canadian employment may show a revision after their massive headline print. China’s Vice Premier Liu He is in Washington to resume trade negotiations with his US counterparts.

h2 1. Stocks find support across the globe/h2

In Japan, equities rallied overnight on renewed optimism over Sino-U.S trade talks which lifted shippers and other cyclical shares while index heavyweight Fast Retailing Co. soared after it reported strong monthly sales. The Nikkei share average rose +0.97%, edging closer to its best level for 2019. The broader Topix advanced +0.63%.

Down-under, Aussie shares closed at a new seven-month high overnight as soaring iron ore prices boosted miners, while healthcare stocks surged after Australia’s government allocated record spending for the sector in its pre-poll budget. The S&P/ASX 200 index rallied +0.68% at the close of trade. The benchmark rose +0.4% on Tuesday. In S. Korea, the Kospi index has rallied +1.2% on reports that the U.S and China are drawing closer to a final trade agreement.

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In China, stocks closed at their highest levels in 12-months overnight, aided by further evidence of economic recovery and signs of progress in trade talks. The blue-chip CSI300 index rose +1.3%, while the Shanghai Composite Index closed up +1.2%. While in Hong Kong, stocks traded atop of their 10-month highs. The Hang Seng index rose +1.2%, while the China Enterprises Index gained +1.4%, its highest close since June 2018.

In Europe, regional bourses trade mainly higher across the board with the DAX outperforming, tracking stronger indices in Asia on upbeat service PMI data out of Europe and Asia.

U.S stocks are set to open in the ‘black’ (+0.49%).

Indices: STOXX 600 +0.67% at 387.60, FTSE +0.07% at 7,395.95, DAX +1.31% at 11,905.83, CAC-40 +0.68% at 5,460.48, IBEX 35 +1.00% at 9,461.93, FTSE MIB +1.12% at 21,759.50, SMI -0.03% at 9,527.00, S&P 500 Futures +0.49%

h2 3. Brent trades towards $70 despite U.S inventories rising/h2

Oil prices have rallied for a fourth consecutive session, pushing Brent toward its five-month high as support from OPEC+ led supply cuts and U.S sanctions overshadow Tuesday’s report stateside showing an unexpected rise in U.S stocks.

Brent futures have gained +38c, or +0.55%, to +$69.75. They earlier reached +$69.96 – the highest since Nov. 12, when they last traded above $70. While U.S West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude rose +20c or +0.32% to +$62.78, having hit +$62.99, the highest since Nov. 7.

Oil prices have been supported for much of this year by efforts from OPEC+, who have pledged to withhold around +1.2M bpd of supply this year. Last month saw supply hit a new four-year low – OPEC crude oil production is expected to average +30.1M bpd in 2019, down from +31.9M bpd in 2018.

Note: According to the API yesterday, U.S crude stocks rose unexpectedly last week, while gas and distillate inventories declined.

Expect dealers to take direction from today’s EIA report (10:30 am EDT).