Contributors Fundamental Analysis Market Update – Asian Session: China Caixin Manufacturing PMI Falls Into Contraction

Market Update – Asian Session: China Caixin Manufacturing PMI Falls Into Contraction

Asia Mid-Session Market Update: Shanghai Composite, AUD fall as China Caixin Manufacturing PMI falls into Contraction

US Session Highlights

(US) President Trump said to have decided to withdraw the US from Paris Climate accord – financial press

(US) Fed’s Kaplan (moderate, voter): Inflation is slow and uneven but trend not deteriorating

(LY) Libya National Oil Corp Chairman: oil production rises to 827Kbpd after technical problem fixed – financial press

(US) APR PENDING HOME SALES M/M: -1.3% V 0.5%E; Y/Y: -5.4% V 0.5% PRIOR

(US) Conference Board May Total online job ads 4.81M v 4.61M m/m v 5.31M y/y; New ads 2.35M v 2.0M m/m v 2.02M y/y

(US) May Chicago Purchasing Manager corrected to 59.4 from erroneously reported 55.2 (v 57.0e)

Stocks closed the month on a subdued note, with major indices printing small numbers in the red. The month brought a new all-time monthly high for the S&P, which gained close to 1%. Best performing sectors in the S&P for May were Technology and Utilities, up 4.1% and 3.6% respectively. The worst performing sector was Energy, down 3.1%. Continued evidence the reflation trade is on hold for now as 10-year Treasury note yields continued to fall today, closing down 1bps, its lowest close since April 18th.

US markets on close: Dow -0.1%, S&P500 -0.1%, Nasdaq -0.1%

Best Sector in S&P500: Utilities

Worst Sector in S&P500: Financials

Biggest gainers: PRGO +7.3%; VRTX +2.7%; REGN +2.3%

Biggest losers: KORS -8.5%; SWN -4.6%; CF -3.6%

At the close: VIX 10.4 (flat); Treasuries: 2-yr 1.29% (-1bp), 10-yr 2.20% (-2bps), 30-yr 2.86% (-3bps)

US movers afterhours

PANW Reports Q3 $0.61 v $0.55e, R$431.8M v $413Me; Guides Q4 $0.78-0.80 v $0.74e, R$481-491M v $485Me; +12.5% afterhours

BOX Reports Q1 -$0.13 v -$0.14e, R$117.2M v $115Me; Guides Q2 -$0.13 to -$0.12 v -$0.12e, R$121-122M v $121Me; +2.9% afterhours

HPE Reports Q2 $0.35 v $0.35e, R$9.9B v $9.87Be; Guides Q3 $0.24-0.28 v $0.31e; Affirms FY17 $1.46-1.56 v $1.48e ; -1.1% afterhours

SMTC Reports Q1 $0.44 v $0.41e, R$149.1M v $146Me; Guides Q2 $0.43-0.49 v $0.45e, R$150-160M v $154Me, gross margin 60.5-61.5%; -3.8% afterhours

Politics

(UK) Times/YouGov general election weekly poll: Conservatives 42% (-1pts), Labour 39% (+3pts)

(US) Pres Trump: I will be announcing my decision on Paris Accord, Thursday at 3:00 P.M

(US) House of Reps said to investigate another meeting between AG Sessions and Russian ambassador Kislyak – US press

(US) Commerce Sec Ross: wants to have full discussions with Congress over NAFTA renegotiations by July before heading into talks in Aug – press

Key economic data

(CN) CHINA MAY CAIXIN PMI MANUFACTURING: 49.6 V 50.1E (1st contraction in 11 months)

(JP) JAPAN MAY FINAL PMI MANUFACTURING: 53.1 V 52.0 PRELIM (3-month high)

(JP) JAPAN Q1 CAPITAL SPENDING Y/Y: 4.5% (2nd straight quarter of growth) V %4.0E; EX-SOFTWARE Y/Y: 5.2% V 4.1%E

(AU) AUSTRALIA MAY AIG MANUFACTURING INDEX: 54.8 V 59.2 PRIOR (8TH CONSECUTIVE MONTH OF EXPANSION; 4-month low)

(AU) AUSTRALIA MAY CORELOGIC HOUSE PRICES M/M: -1.1% V 0.1% PRIOR

(AU) AUSTRALIA APR RETAIL SALES M/M: +1.0% V +0.3%E (31-month high)

(AU) AUSTRALIA Q1 PRIVATE CAPITAL EXPENDITURE (CAPEX) Q/Q: 0.3% V 0.5%E

(KR) SOUTH KOREA MAY PMI MANUFACTURING: 49.2 V 49.4 PRIOR (10th consecutive contraction)

(KR) SOUTH KOREA MAY TRADE BALANCE: $6.0B V $6.8BE

(KR) SOUTH KOREA MAY CPI M/M: 0.1% V +0.2%E; Y/Y: 2.0% V 2.0%E; CPI CORE Y/Y: 1.4% V 1.4%E

Asia Session Notable Observations, Speakers and Press

Asian indices are mixed again, tracking a lackluster US session where investors are biding their time before Friday’s non-farm payrolls. Oil was in focus with a steep decline in US hours on reports of expanded Libya production, though some of the selloff was reversed on a large API inventory draw. US 2-10 Treasury yield curve continues to narrow, while PIMCO estimates a 70% chance of a US recession over the next 5 years. Fed’s Williams speaking in Asia also voiced possibility of a total of 4 rate hikes this year if US economic growth strengthens, though he still sees 3 as the baseline scenario.

China is leading regional indices to the downside after a much weaker than expected Caixin Manuf PMI sank into contraction for the first time in 11 months. Some of the key components saw first fall in input costs since last June, growth in new orders the slowest seen since the current upturn began in July 2016, and employment decline at the quickest pace seen since last September. Input costs also fell for the first time in nearly a year in evidence of disinflationary pressure. The Caixin PMI is focused more on smaller firms as opposed to the official PMI which earlier this week showed some support from last month’s 6-month lows.

Nikkei225 is faring better with a modest lift despite the lower US yields and stable USD/JPY rate ranging around ¥111, as Japan’s Corporate Spending rose for the 2nd straight quarter and corporate profits grew double-digits despite stronger JPY in Q1. In other FX majors, AUD/USD initially rallied on the release of better than expected Retail Sales and an upgrade in Australia CAPEX projections for the current and next FY’s, but then reversed all of those gains to fall 60pips from the highs below 0.7390 on soft China PMI. GBP came under pressure again with another UK election poll portending a hung Parliament in next week’s vote.

Volatility around China currency continued as PBoC fix was the strongest since Nov 10th. Traders attribute the preference for stronger Yuan as a preemptive move ahead of the anticipated Fed hike that is expected to strengthen the greenback, as Chinese central bank worries about accelerated outflows amid the increasingly apparent economic slowdown.

China

(CN) ANZ: Sees China Q2 GDP at 6.6%; Latest expansion in Services sector may not be sustained amid regulatory tightening in financial sector – Chinese press

Japan

(JP) BoJ Harada: BoJ’s measures have produced excellent results; no chance BOJ will incur losses in long term perspective

(JP) Japan to add Debt-to-GDP ratio as a fiscal target – Japanese Press

Korea

(KR) BOK Gov Lee: Not sure if global recovery can by sustained

Asian Equity Indices/Futures (00:00ET)

Nikkei +1.1%, Hang Seng +0.4%, Shanghai Composite -0.5%, ASX200 +0.1%, Kospi -0.1%

Equity Futures: S&P500 flat; Nasdaq +0.2%, Dax -0.1%, FTSE100 +0.1%

FX ranges/Commodities/Fixed Income (00:00ET)

EUR 1.1230-1.1255; JPY 110.70-111.10; AUD 0.7385-0.7455; NZD 0.7060-0.7090

June Gold -0.3% at 1,268/oz; July Crude Oil +0.9% at $48.75/brl; July Copper -0.5% at $2.57/lb

(US) Weekly API Oil Inventories: Crude: -8.7M v -1.5M prior (biggest draw since Sept 2016)

(CN) PBOC SETS YUAN MID POINT AT 6.8090 V 6.8633 PRIOR; Biggest margin of increase since Jan 6th; Strongest Yuan fix since Nov 10th

(CN) PBOC to inject combined CNY100B v CNY210B prior

(JP) Japan MoF sells ¥2.08T v ¥2.3T offered in 10-year 0.1% JGBs; Avg yield: 0.051% v 0.030% prior; bid to cover: 3.64x v 3.76x prior

Asia equities notable movers

Australia

ANZ -0.5%; New mortgage capital model approved by APRA; adoption to impact Level 2 CET1 ratio negatively by 26bps

Boral (BLD) -1.0%; Cut at JPMorgan

WesFarmers (WES) -3.9%; Cut at Morgan Stanley

Japan

Canon (7751) +3.2%; stock buyback

JGC (1963) +2.3%; awarded LNG contract

Sumitomo Mitsui (8316) +1.0%; CEO: Guides FY20

Toshiba (6502) -1.6%; transferring its stake in its chip joint venture back into the core company – Nikkei

Hong Kong

Top SPring (3688) +1.5%; Reports Q1

Lee’s Pharma (950) -1.0%; Reports Q1

Previous articleUSD/CHF Daily Outlook
Next articleGBP/USD Daily Outlook
All information provided by Trade The News (a product of Trade The News, Inc. "referred to as TTN hereafter") is for informational purposes only. Information provided is not meant as investment advice nor is it a recommendation to Buy or Sell securities. Although information is taken from sources deemed reliable, no guarantees or assurances can be made to the accuracy of any information provided. 1. Information can be inaccurate and/or incomplete 2. Information can be mistakenly re-released or be delayed, 3. Information may be incorrect, misread, misinterpreted or misunderstood 4. Human error is a business risk you are willing to assume 5. Technology can crash or be interrupted without notice 6. Trading decisions are the responsibility of traders, not those providing additional information. Trade The News is not liable (financial and/or non-financial) for any losses that may arise from any information provided by TTN. Trading securities involves a high degree of risk, and financial losses can and do occur on a regular basis and are part of the risk of trading and investing.

NO COMMENTS

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Exit mobile version