(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a
columnist for Reuters.)
By Alden Bentley
NEW YORK, Oct 13 (Reuters) -
TRADING DAY
Making sense of the forces driving global markets
Jamie McGeever is enjoying some well-deserved time off, but the
Reuters markets team will still keep you up to date on what's
happening in markets. The biggest U.S. banks will report
third-quarter results on Tuesday, at the vanguard of the S&P 500
earnings parade over the next few weeks. I'd love to hear from
you, so please reach out to me with comments at
Today's Key Reads
* Trump on track to meet Xi in South Korea, Bessent
says
* Wall Street rallies on Trump China comments;
Broadcom
surges
* How the United States is eating Trump's tariffs
* Gold breaks $4,100 to hit high on trade jitters,
rate-cut optimism
* JPMorgan to invest up to $10 billion in US
national
security as part of $1.5 trillion pledge
* Oil rises as US, China try to de-escalate trade
tensions
Today's Key Market Moves
STOCKS: Major U.S. indexes rebounded sharply, led by
chipmakers like Broadcom and AI-related tech stocks,
after President Donald Trump struck a more conciliatory tone
that eased worries about a trade war with China. The S&P 500
was up 1.6% in late trade. The Nasdaq was up
2.2%.
SHARES/SECTORS: Information Technology is the top-performing
S&P 500 sector on the day, followed closely by Consumer
Discretionary.
FX: The U.S. dollar steadied after Trump dialed back trade
tensions with China, while political developments in France and
Japan undermined the euro and the yen.
BONDS: Bond markets were closed for Columbus Day.
COMMODITIES: Oil prices recovered from Friday's
five-month lows as talks between Trump and Chinese President Xi
Jinping in late October appeared to be back on. The renewed
U.S.-China trade spat vaulted gold above $4,100 an ounce
for the first time.
CRYPTO: According to market players on Monday, Friday's late
wipeout in cryptocurrencies was the largest liquidation ever,
amounting to over $19 billion of leveraged positions. On Monday,
bitcoin was down 0.60% to $114,375.22 while ethereum
declined 0.54% to $4,120.42.
Today's Key Talking Points
Trump chills out on China
Just as suddenly as Trump's familiar-sounding threat to
impose 100% tariffs on China for curbing exports of rare earths
sent Wall Street into freefall on Friday, de-escalation on
Monday invited a rush of renewed stock buying that looked to put
record territory back in play.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told Fox Business Network
that the president was back on track to meet Chinese President
Xi Jinping in South Korea later this month as originally
planned.
While Monday was a normal day for stock markets, bond
traders were off for Columbus Day and Indigenous Peoples' Day.
The federal holiday came as many government workers are already
furloughed while the shutdown drags on, and some could be out of
a job when Congress ends it and agrees on a spending bill.
There is no sign that Democrats and Republicans will find
common ground this week, meaning indicators like producer
prices, retail sales and weekly jobless claims will not be
released and join the list of important, but probably stale,
data like September payrolls that will someday be released in a
flood.
But Tuesday promises to be busy nevertheless with JPMorgan
Chase JPM, Goldman Sachs GS, Citigroup C and Wells Fargo WFC
releasing earnings to kick off the third-quarter reporting
season. Also Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell speaks in
Philadelphia on economic conditions and monetary policy, with
data-starved traders even more keen to get a read on how the Fed
will make a decision to ease again, or not, when it is missing
weeks of information on the economy.
Gold: The Fear Trade
Gold is perhaps the biggest beneficiary of the upwelling of
recriminations between Trump and Xi. It rose above $4,100 an
ounce for the first time on Monday, even after they turned the
heat down, with traders betting that more Fed easing by year-end
will make zero-yield bullion more appealing. With central banks
buying and investors availing themselves of ETFs, there appear
to be enough positives to keep the rally going. Silver also hit
a record above $52 an ounce.
What could move markets tomorrow?
* JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, Wells Fargo report
earnings
* Fed Chair Jerome Powell speaks on monetary policy and
economy
Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect
the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is
committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.
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