Take Five: World markets themes for the week ahead
Send a link to a friend
[December 02, 2017]
LONDON (Reuters) - Following
are five big themes likely to dominate thinking of investors and traders
in the coming week and the Reuters stories related to them.
1/ PUT UP OR SHUT UP
It is not only Donald Trump's tax cut plans, various White House
scandals and non-farm payrolls that will keep markets focused on the
United States next week. On Friday there is also the small matter of an
expiring deadline on funding needed to keep the government open.
Congress can either approve a huge bill which would see Washington
though until Sept. 30, 2018, pass a shorter extension of current
funding, or do nothing at all and risk a partial shutdown.
The U.S. Treasury also hits its limit on borrowing and although it is
likely to take steps to postpone the immediate need for Congress to take
action, it all points to yet more U.S. debt.
These rows can also do serious damage. The United States lost its prized
triple-A credit rating in 2011 in the aftermath of one such showdown and
history shows the uncertainty they cause can have an impact, albeit
short-term, on consumer confidence and the jobs numbers.
2/ MUSCLES FROM BRUSSELS
There's one thing and one thing only that's driving sterling these days:
Brexit.
Look at its gyrations this week. it chalked up its biggest rise in over
seven months on Wednesday after EU diplomats said Britain had moved
"close" to EU demands over Brexit. It hit a two-month high above $1.35
the following day. On Friday though, it had its biggest fall in three
weeks on concerns about the Irish border and media reports that London's
Brexit negotiator David Davis could resign over an internal party issue.
Next week, the Brexit negotiations enter a key phase. Prime Minister
Theresa May is due to meet European Commission President Jean-Claude
Juncker and his chief Brexit negotiator, Michel Barnier, in Brussels for
lunch on Monday.
If that meeting is deemed by Brussels to have produced sufficient
progress, EU leaders could give a green light to trade talks at a summit
on Dec. 14-15, reducing the risk of a "hard Brexit". Watch the pound.
Brexit minister Davis in threat to quit over Damian Green storm
3/ WE HAVE LIFT-OFF
South Korea became the first major Asian central bank since 2014 to hike
interest rates this week. It is a sign the 'great unwinding' of
crisis-era low interest rates is spreading and resurgent growth in
Europe and the United States is benefiting Asia too.
So who is next? Further south, Australia is expected to keep rates on
hold next week but there will be focus on whether there is any hint of a
possible hike next year.
[to top of second column] |
Graduate students rally against the proposed GOP tax reform bill at
Union Square in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York,
U.S., November 29, 2017. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/File Photo
Malaysia and the Philippines could well nudge rates up next year too, as their
booming economies see higher inflation which is pushing 'real' interest rates
further into the dirt. There is also China trade data which will provide the
latest pulse reading for Asia's industrial powerhouse.
4/ BUBBLES BREWING?
Skittishness on tech stocks as bubble fears gain more traction and high
expectations for a U.S. tax reform bill have sparked a rotation from the
ubiquitously popular tech sector into banks which stand to gain from lower tax
rates.
Inflows to U.S. financials stocks hit a 21-week high, Bank of America Merrill
Lynch said on Friday, while global tech funds, which have drawn some of the
biggest flows this year, saw their first outflows in eight weeks after hoovering
up $6 billion in the past six weeks.
Tech stocks have a fairly low tax rate already, so they're among the sectors
seen as benefiting the least from any tax cuts that eventually materialize.
Tech is also being impacted by fears that valuations, which have reached
dizzying heights this year, are floating into bubble territory.
And it is not only stocks. Bitcoin is the other big imponderable. The
cryptocurrency smashed through $10,000 and then $11,000 this week, before
promptly plunging 20 percent. Who knows what will happen if this particular
bubble bursts.
5/ TALKING TURKEY
Turkey will be in the spotlight again next week as investors await fresh
revelations from a U.S. trial involving a Turkish-Iranian gold trader.
Reza Zarrab, who is cooperating with U.S. prosecutors in the criminal trial of a
Turkish Halkbank executive accused of helping to launder money for Iran, has
already implicated President Tayyip Erdogan.
Turkey has dismissed the accusations of sanctions-busting as
politically-motivated, with the aim of "cornering" Turkey and its economy. The
trial is threatening funding for Turkey's dollar-dependent banks, with investors
fretting about potential fines or even sanctions from U.S. regulators.
Markets will also be watching Turkey's November inflation print, due on Monday.
After a battering for the lira it could easily breach 12 percent and that would
crank up the pressure for action from the country's central bank.
(Reporting by Marc Jones; Editing by Catherine Evans)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |