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European shares end the session mostly higher. German Dax lags.

10 year yields are lower

The major European shares are ending the session mostly higher with German Dax lagging.
The provisional closes are showing:
  • German DAX, -0.2%
  • France’s CAC, +0.1%
  • UK’s FTSE, +0.9%
  • Spain’s Ibex, +0.9%
  • Italy’s FTSE MIB, +0.9%
In the benchmark 10 year note sector yields are lower. German yields are down marginally.  Spain, Italy and Portugal are down more as growth, inflation and the prospect for more ECB stimulus sends yields lower.

Saudi oil minister: OPEC+ needs a few months to drain excess inventory

No OPEC+ meeting in April, next one to be in June

  • Next JMMC meeting likely in first half of May
  • Date to be announced in the next two weeks
  • Inventory glut needs to be drained before cuts are ended
  • Confident that March oil output cuts compliance is to exceed 100%
Unless the Saudis themselves step up with further cuts, it’s hard to see how they can keep up with >100% compliance. That said, sentiment remains that as long as they are still doing their part it should keep oil prices underpinned over the next few months.

Eurozone January trade balance €17.0 billion vs €15.0 billion expected

Latest data released by Eurostat – 18 March 2019

  • Prior €15.6 billion; revised to €16.0 billion
  • Non-seasonally adjusted trade balance €1.5 billion
  • Prior €17.0 billion
Exports rose by 0.8% m/m while imports were also up by 0.3% m/m, so that will offer some good news for the overall Eurozone trade outlook; though this is January data only. Trade to the US is seen at a surplus of €11.5 billion and that is higher than the €10.1 billion recorded in January 2018. Can you say tariffs?

Cable falls to session low as markets wait on further Brexit developments

Cable touches a low of 1.3246 as MV3 is eyed

GBP/USD H1 18-03

Despite buyers staying in near-term control, the 1.3300 handle remains a key resistance level at this point as Brexit developments go silent today with the government talking with the DUP to convince them to vote for May’s deal in a potential third meaningful vote tomorrow or Wednesday.
The DUP’s support is key to sway other voters at this point and euroskeptic parliament members remain adamant that things won’t change and May will eventually pull tomorrow’s vote from being tabled. The risk of that is likely weighing on the pound for the time being as headlines are currently few and far between.
That said, there is still some support for the pound and cable close to the 50.0 retracement level as we saw last week around 1.3216. The 100-hour MA (red line) also resides at 1.3220 now so that will offer additional support for buyers. Light bids are then noted around 1.3200.
Those will be the key levels to eye for in the sessions to come if you’re looking for any extension towards the upside or downside for cable.

China stocks climb to 10-month high ahead of Fed meeting

Chinese stocks closed at the highest level in almost 10 months on Monday, posting the biggest gains in Asia as investors await further clues from US Federal Reserve this week as to whether it will continue its wait and see approach.

The CSI 300 closed up 2.9 per cent, its largest one-day gain since late February, and pushing the index to its highest level since May. Consumer cyclicals were among the best performers on the index, rising 5.6 per cent while healthcare stocks gained 4.5 per cent.

The index is now 27.9 per cent higher for the year to date.

China shadow banking crackdown to moderate in 2019

China’s crackdown on risky shadow banking activities appears to be gaining traction, with new data showing the sector has shrunk to its smallest level since the end of 2016, but priorities have shifted to maintaining economic growth.

In 2018, shadow banking assets fell by Rmb4.3tn ($640.6bn) to Rmb61.3tn, equating to 68 per cent of GDP, according to data from Moody’s. This is down from a peak of 87 per cent of GDP reached at the end of 2016, when a regulatory crackdown intensified. 

Borrowers in the non-bank lending sector tend to be small businesses, individuals without credit cards and larger companies that have exhausted credit lines at state-owned banks.

The curb on risky non-bank lending has resulted in a shift to formal bank loans, helped by the central bank’s dovish stance designed to encourage lending. However, Moody’s suggests that this shift has only partly offset the steep decline in shadow bank lending, and that privately-owned enterprises have been disproportionately affected by lower credit availability. 

Moody’s expects that the shadow banking crackdown will moderate in 2019, as policymakers shift their focus to supporting growth. “This should help support economic and financial stability, and will marginally alleviate funding pressure on POEs most affected by the contraction in shadow credit supply,” the report said. “However, a rapid rebound in shadow credit supply is also unlikely, as the authorities will retain focus on financial system risks.”

China’s banking regulator issued new guidelines last week to encourage formal lending to small businesses, in an effort to address financing bottlenecks.

Peer-to-peer lending also dropped by 24 per cent year on year at the end of 2018, as hundreds of such providers collapsed. 

China says country’s foreign trade situation is becoming more uncertain

Some commentary from China’s assistant commerce minister

  • China’s foreign trade situation becoming more uncertain, more ‘complicated’
  • Reiterates to actively expand imports
It generally isn’t a good sign when China starts making comments like these. But given the backdrop over the past two weeks has been that of officials pledging to bolster the economy, this will matter little. That said, just be mindful of how much more of such comments will creep up in the future as they tend to add up and weigh on sentiment.
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