A look at the day ahead in European and global markets from
Ankur Banerjee
The mere prospect of a U.S.-China trade deal which looks
more like a truce extension was enough to send stocks to record
highs, weigh on gold prices and push up commodities including
copper ahead of an action-packed week.
First things first: There is no agreed deal yet; perhaps
just a concept of a deal, and that is what has sparked a risk-on
rally on Monday which is set to continue in Europe.
U.S. and Chinese officials on Sunday hashed out the
framework of a trade deal for U.S. President Donald Trump and
Chinese President Xi Jinping to decide on later this week when
they meet in South Korea.
An agreement could pause steep U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods
as well as stringent Chinese rare earths export controls,
calming investor nerves. A lot of the positive noise has come
from U.S. officials while their Chinese counterparts have been a
bit more circumspect.
Stocks, though, have galloped higher, with benchmark indices
in Japan, Taiwan and South Korea all
setting records after gaining 2%. Chinese stocks
pushed up 0.86% while Nasdaq futures rose 1%.
A lot of what has been laid out so far is within market
expectations so there could be disappointment if any "deal"
manages to just kick the can down the road.
In the meantime, investor enthusiasm is likely to keep
stocks aloft ahead of central bank meetings in Japan, Canada,
Europe and the United States.
The U.S. Federal Reserve will take the limelight when it
will likely lower its policy interest rate by 25 basis points.
The focus will immediately shift to what comes next considering
the U.S. government shutdown and resultant dearth of economic
data leaves little from which to take cues.
The European Central Bank is widely expected to maintain its
policy rate so investor attention will be more trained on the
busiest week of this earnings season. Mega-cap earnings will yet
again shape near-term sentiment.
Key developments that could influence markets on Monday:
* Ifo German business sentiment data for October