Turkish Lira Rally Halted On U.S Sanctions Threat

 | Aug 17, 2018 14:23

Friday August 17: Five things the markets are talking about

Global trade worries have not disappeared, they are just on hiatus, as market participants prefer to regroup and strategize in this unorthodox U.S trade and foreign policy environment.

Emerging market worries are not going away any time soon. They continue to straddle in bear market territory. U.S Treasury Secretary Mnuchin stated Thursday that Turkey would face more sanctions if the country did not release a detained American pastor and coupled with a weeklong Turkish public holiday, beginning Monday, should provide further EM market volatility.

For now, the possibility of a Sino-U.S trade deal has brought some calm to the market, but trade and currency wars remain to the fore.

Euro equities opened in the ‘black,’ but trade under pressure, after Asian bourses closed out a volatile week on a positive note. Both the U.S dollar and Treasuries trade steady.

For the Loonie (C$1.3136), following a relatively quiet week on the data front, this morning’s inflation numbers (08:30 am EDT) should provide some direction, though actual will need to be better than forecast for the CAD to get support.

After last Friday’s employment numbers where Canada added a net +54.1K jobs in July on a seasonally adjusted basis and an unemployment rate ticking down to +5.8% adds to the probability that the Bank of Canada (BoC) will hike the benchmark interest rate one more time in 2018.

Don’t expect the BoC to stray too far away from the Fed’s rate normalization plan. Include any positives on Nafta and like the Mexican peso, the loonie will roll.

1. Asian shares gain on Sino-U.S trade talks

In Japan, the Nikkei rallied overnight on hopes that talk between China and the U.S next week (Aug 21 & 22) would ease trade tensions. The Nikkei share average ended +0.4% higher, while the broader Topix added +0.6%.

Note: The two largest economies are due to implement tariffs on billions of dollars of each other’s goods on Aug. 23, in addition to taxes that took effect on July 6.

Down-under, Aussie shares rallied overnight, supported by financials and stronger earnings. The S&P/ASX 200 index closed +0.2% higher. The benchmark closed unchanged on Thursday and recorded a weekly gain of about +1%. In S. Korea, the Kospi stock index ended higher on China-U.S trade talk news. The KOSPI was up +0.28%. For the week, the benchmark index tumbled -1.6%, marking its biggest weekly loss since five-weeks.

In China, Shanghai stocks closed of their 31-month low overnight, dragged down by a slump in healthcare firms amid vaccine scandal fallout. The blue-chip CSI 300 index ended -1.5% down at 3,229.62 points, while the Shanghai Composite Index closed down -1.3%. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng Index, down for a fifth consecutive session Thursday, gained +0.42% as tech stocks recovered.

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In Europe, regional bourses trade sideways, however, the potential of renewed Sino-U.S talks is helping risk sentiment going into the weekend, but the treat of further Turkey sanctions will sour investor risk appetite.

U.S stocks are set to open unchanged (+0.0%).

Indices: Stoxx50 -0.1% at 3,379, FTSE flat at 7,555, DAX -0.1% at 12,226, CAC-40 +0.2% at 5,357; IBEX-35 -0.1% at 9,419, FTSE MIB -0.5% at 20,421, SMI +0.2% at 9,017, S&P 500 Futures flat