Five Things You Need to Know to Start Your Day
Five Things You Need to Know to Start Your Day
(Bloomberg) --
Far right candidate wins in Brazil, Democrat win would not be good for U.S. Stocks, and Merkel to quit as party leader. Here are some of the things people in markets are talking about today.
Right turn
Jair Bolsonaro received a call from President Donald Trump to congratulate him on his victory in yesterday’s Brazilian presidential election. Bolsonaro, a former army captain, who campaigned on a right-wing platform of privatizations, liberal gun laws and security won more than 55 percent of second round votes. Market reaction to the result has been positive, with a Japanese ETF that tracks Brazilian stocks jumping 14 percent in the immediate aftermath.
Midterms
Donald Trump remained on the campaign trail in the wake of the mass shooting at a synagogue in Pittsburgh that left 11 people dead on Saturday. While he did promise to “tone it down a little,” the decision to go ahead with an event in Indianapolis may point to the pressure the GOP is under in the midterm elections next week. Veteran emerging-market investor Mark Mobius said that a Democratic Party majority in the House of Representatives would help push U.S. stocks into a bear market as investors re-allocate to the rest of the world. The Federal Reserve would be unlikely to help if stocks fall unless things get very bad indeed, Morgan Stanley’s cross-asset strategy team warned.
End of an era
German Chancellor Angela Merkel will quit as head of her Christian Democratic party after nearly two decades at the helm, telling a leadership meeting of her party that she won’t run again for the party chairmanship at a convention in December, according to a person familiar with the matter. After leading her country for 13 years, attention is turning to who will succeed her as head of Germany’s largest party, and possibly, in time, as leader of Germany. There is no indication that Merkel intends to stand down as Chancellor.
Markets mixed
Overnight, the MSCI Asia Pacific Index slipped 0.2 percent while Japan’s Topix closed 0.4 percent lower as shares in the region reversed early session gains. In Europe, the Stoxx 600 Index was 1 percent higher at 5:50 a.m. as the region’s banks led gains on the back of good results from HSBC Holdings Plc. S&P 500 futures pointed to a gain at the open, the 10-year Treasury yield was at 3.081 percent and gold dropped.
U.K. budget
At 11:30 a.m. Eastern Time U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond will deliver his budget to parliament. All of the plans he is set to announce will likely be reliant on the country securing a deal on Britain’s exit from the European Union. Hammond said in an interview that the U.K. would need a new budget with a new strategy should the country leave without a deal. That caveat aside, there are some sectors such as retail and banking that may be set to benefit from measures announced today.
What we've been reading
This is what's caught our eye over the weekend.
- Odd Lots: Why eurodollars might be ground zero for de-globalization, and the market sell-off.
- Mnuchin set to top Geithner’s record as Treasury auctions grow.
- Early indicators show China’s slowdown worsened again in October.
- The get rich quick scheme that almost killed a German soccer team.
- IBM pursues Amazon into cloud with $33 billion Red Hat takeover.
- Lion Air Boeing 737 crashes in Indonesia with 189 people on board.
- The membrane that can create electricity from nothing but salty water.
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Natasha Doff at ndoff@bloomberg.net, Samuel Potter
©2018 Bloomberg L.P.