A look at the day ahead in European and global markets from
Ankur Banerjee
Chinese stocks were back at it and surging on Thursday, shaking
off the previous day's slump, with the focus on a Saturday press
briefing that investors hope will shed more light on fiscal
stimulus measures aimed at reviving China's economy.
European stocks might get a breather - especially
China-related miners and luxury names that have taken a beating
as scepticism around Chinese stimulus gains ground. Futures
indicate European bourses are due for a slightly higher open.
Over in the Far East, investor sentiment got a shot in the
arm early on Thursday as the People's Bank of China kicked off a
500 billion yuan facility to spur capital markets which
nevertheless were volatile and jittery.
The blue-chip index was last up 3.5% after sliding
7% on Wednesday, its biggest one-day drop since the pandemic as
investors looked for details around the stimulus and awaited
fiscal moves to spur growth.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng was up 4% and in the space of
two weeks has surged to be second best-performing major stock
market in Asia this year with a gain of 25%, much of which has
come since the stimulus was announced on Sept. 24.
All eyes though will be on a finance ministry press
conference on Saturday that could reveal plans on fiscal
stimulus.
In many ways, this is it, this is the moment markets and
investors have been waiting for, especially after the central
bank and other regulators in late September announced the most
aggressive monetary stimulus measures since COVID-19 and steps
to revive the debt-ridden property market.
Those measures whetted investor appetite, stoking
expectations for large-scale fiscal moves in the near term.
Analysts though are wary that if these lofty expectations are
not met, there may yet be a steep pull back in stocks.
Beyond China, investor attention will be on U.S. inflation
data due later in the day, with traders scaling back
expectations of steep interest rate cuts from the Federal
Reserve in the near term in the wake of blowout jobs data last
week.
A hot report could knock back more of those rate cut
expectations, analysts said.
U.S. dollar remained perched on a two-month high on the back
of these shifting rate cut expectations.
Key developments that could influence markets on Thursday:
Economic events: Germany retail sales for July; U.S.
inflation data for September