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Trump tweets about the stock market at a record high

Strong day for stocks

All the gains in the S&P 500 were essentially at the open. Since then the index has remainded around current levels. The index is up 28 points to 3196.
New Stock Market high! I will never get bored of telling you that – and we will never get tired of winning!
You may remember that just 13 days ago, Trump said:
“If the stock market goes up or down ― I don’t watch the stock market,”
Trump said in London, where he is attending a NATO summit. “I watch jobs. Jobs are what I watch.”

The two major risk factors in markets for 2019 will still be there in 2020

US-China trade and Brexit worries will not go away despite some improvement in their respective rhetoric at the moment

We’re getting closer to a Phase One trade deal and Boris Johnson just won big in the UK election last week. Two of the biggest risk factors that has plagued markets this year appear to be finding some form of conclusion, but are they really?

US-China trade war

US-China
As great as the Phase One trade deal is and will be, it isn’t the “be all, end all” deal that will see US-China relations significantly improve.
This is merely a temporary ceasefire at best and at worst, it’s just a delusion to keep some hope that both sides are not yet ready to engage in a full-blown trade and geopolitical war.
The Phase One deal will include tariffs rollback by the US in exchange for China purchasing more farm products – to try and reach $40 to $50 billion annually – as well as some “firm” commitments on technology transfer, currency and opening up of its economy.
The catch here is that it will include some subjective way of determining how both sides will live up to their respective end of the deal. That tells me that ultimately, this will eventually lead to either one of them calling the other out when the time is right.
As such, don’t expect the hostilities and trade worries to die down just because the Phase One deal has been signed – if it even does that is. This is a worry that will haunt markets for many more years to come and 2019 is but a taste of what it can be like.

Brexit

Boris Brexit
Boris Johnson got his much sought after majority in parliament – quite comfortably as a matter of fact – and now he can get his Brexit deal across the finish line. Easy-peasy.
Sadly, this is just merely the starting point in the whole Brexit process.
Once Johnson gets his deal through the legislative hurdles in parliament in January next year, he will have to then go on to negotiate a future trade relationship with the EU.
And for the uninformed, they will only have until the end of next year to finalise a deal and to try and implement it thereafter. Otherwise, the UK will leave the EU without a deal.
Yes, a no-deal Brexit is still on the table as long as the UK and EU cannot agree to a trade deal during the transition period next year.
That can still be avoided though if the UK requests an extension to the transition period before July next year. However, Johnson has categorically ruled that out repeatedly over the past two months in what looks to be a gambit to pressure EU leaders during talks.
We’ll see how all of that plays out but it is clear as day that both sides won’t get a deal done before 31 December 2020. That is all but a pipe dream.
As such, we will have to see if Johnson will find it sensible to negotiate further in the coming years – prolonging the Brexit uncertainty – or opt to crash out of the EU without a deal, wasting all the time we have spent extending the Brexit deadline since March.

Eurozone December flash manufacturing PMI 45.9 vs 47.3 expected

Latest data released by Markit – 16 December 2019

  • Prior 46.9
  • Services PMI 52.4 vs 52.0 expected
  • Prior 51.9
  • Composite PMI 50.6 vs 50.7 expected
  • Prior 50.6
No surprises there as the drop in the manufacturing print has been foreshadowed by the more sluggish French and German prints earlier. Overall, this points to more stagnation seen in the euro area economy in Q4 as the composite reading keeps steady just above 50.

China says US accusations against Chinese diplomats for spying are completely devoid of facts

Further comments by the Chinese foreign ministry

This is in relation to the news over the weekend after the US expelled Chinese officials after they drove on to a sensitive military base. The US did so on the grounds that they were suspected spies and China is denying the allegation here.

A Phase One trade deal is certainly achievable but when you factor in issues like this and the Hong Kong and Xinjiang bills, any major progress in US-China relations will require much more give and take and that will be the real challenge.

USTR calls out trade news speculation in latest statement

Specifically points the finger to the Wall St Journal ForexLive “Washington, DC –  Bob Davis and Lingling Wei at the Wall Street Journal, based on anonymous sources, have reported at least three times this week that the United States negotiators offered to cut by as much as one half the tariff rates on approximately $360 billion of Chinese imports in exchange for certain purchases.While we do not comment on the content of negotiations, we have said publicly and on the record that this is totally false, untrue and baseless.It did not happen. In addition and to be completely clear, we have personally, and on the record, told Mr. Davis and another Wall Street Journal reporter repeatedly that this is utterly false. No such offer was ever made to China by the United States. There is not a single knowledgeable American negotiator who would support this falsehood. Further, there is no Chinese negotiator who could honestly be this source.We will not speculate on why the Chinese or an American uninvolved with these negotiations would manipulate the story. This is another example of reporting on an  important alleged event based on secret sources, some of which may have obvious bias. The Wall Street Journal should make very clear that those actually involved for the United States have so clearly indicated that they are untrue, fabricated falsehoods. It should also expose possible biases of the anonymous source.” was the article in question that they are specifically referencing. To be fair to the WSJ, there will also never be any proof to substantiate the claims made by the USTR above.

More on China cutting tariffs on some US goods

Over the weekend news that has said it’ll suspend additional tariffs on some US goods.

The announcement was from the Customs Tariff Commission of State Council on Sunday as a response to the phase one trade deal.
Adding a little more info now:
  • China to suspend additional tariffs of 5-10% in some US goods planned to take effect December 15
  • China is also to continue its suspension of additional tariffs on US vehicles and auto parts
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