XM levert geen diensten aan inwoners van de Verenigde Staten.

China doubts as economy struggles, US bonds closed



<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><head><title>MORNING BID AMERICAS-China doubts as economy struggles, US bonds closed</title></head><body>

A look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike Dolan

With U.S. Treasury markets closed on Monday, Wall Street stocks are set to cruise on higher into the unfolding corporate earnings season - but may first have to take early direction from China's weekend stimulus update.

The Colombus Day holiday closes Federal offices and the bond market but the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq remain open and stock futures ESc1 are higher first thing, building on the S&P500's .SPX latest charge to new record highs.

Financials led the way on Friday as the early burst of big bank and asset manager earnings was cheered - with 3-6% share price gains on Friday for the likes of JPMorgan, Wells Fargo and BlackRock.

On Monday, however, China's markets struggled for direction as Saturday's much-heralded press conference on fiscal measures to accompany the recent frantic monetary easing turned out to be a bit of a damp squib.

A little short on the sort of details investors had been betting on, Finance Minister Lan Foan reiterated Beijing's broad plans to revive the ailing economy, with promises made on increases to government debt and support for consumers and the property sector.

Chinese mainland stocks .CSI300 gyrated initially and eventually ended more than 1% higher. But Hong Kong's Hang Seng .HSI ended 0.75% in the red. The offshore yuan CNH= weakened slightly against a red-hot dollar.

Depending on who you talk to, you'll get a different readout on Beijing's rescue plans. But what's not in doubt is that they are badly needed.

The latest economic news from China shows the country still flirting with outright price deflation through September, as headline annual consumer prices fell below forecast to just 0.4% and annual factory gate price inflation continued to slump a whopping 2.8% rate during the month.

What's more, China's exports missed too - growing at the slowest pace in five months in September and suggesting manufacturers are no longer rushing out orders ahead of tariffs from trade partners. But at a paltry 0.3%, annual imports growth slowed too and were a third of expectations.

While some banks such as Goldman Sachs have nudged up next year's real GDP forecasts due to the stimulus measures, the price picture raises questions about nominal growth and still suggests the government's 5% growth targets will be hard to hit.

And the geopolitics doesn't help much. China's military launched a new round of war games near Taiwan on Monday, saying it was a warning to the "separatist acts of Taiwan independence forces" - drawing condemnation from the Taipei and U.S. governments.

Taiwan's giant chipmaker TSMC 2330.TW, the main producer of advanced chips used in artificial intelligence applications, reports earnings on Thursday and is expected to show a 40% leap in third-quarter profit thanks to soaring AI-related demand.

Oil prices Clc1 weakened on the latest sweep of Chinese data and policy details, with some of the weekend premium on Middle East concerns dissipating on Monday too.

Speculation over how Israel will respond to recent Iranian rocket attacks continues to simmer, however, with attention on Monday focussing on a U.S. decision to send both U.S. troops and anti-missile systems to Israel

Even though last week's U.S. inflation numbers ran a bit hotter than forecast, the energy price picture remains relatively contained and annual U.S. crude prices have now been falling at a 10%-plus pace for more than six weeks.

In Europe, markets are shaping up this week for the third European Central Bank interest rate cut of the year on Thursday. European stock .STOXXE were flat - warily eyeing both the muddy Chinese picture as trade tensions between Brussels and Beijing jar, but also likely further credit easing at home.

LVMH LVMH.PA, Hermes HRMS.PA, Kering PRTP.PA and other French luxury stocks exposed to China fell between 1.4% and 3.6% on Monday.

The euro EUR= ebbed slightly into the ECB decision, with another quarter point cut in the official deposit rate to 3.25% now more or less fully priced.

French debt markets and risk spreads FR10DE10=RR shrugged off Friday's decision by Fitch credit ratings firm to lower the outlook on France's sovereign rating following the country's latest deficit-cutting budget plan last week.

In Britain, Prime Minister Keir Starmer will vow to scrap regulation that holds back growth and investment when he hosts some of the world's biggest businesses on Monday at a conference designed to boost Britain's appeal.

Back stateside, a relatively quiet Monday is likely as a result of the semi holiday. The earnings season resumes in earnest on Tuesday with updates from Goldman, Bank of America, Citigroup, State Street, Johnson & Johnson and others.

Politics also gets more intense as the November 5 election nears.

Although national opinion polls and those in swing states still show little between Democrat Kamala Harris and Republican Donald Trump, betting markets are making Trump slight favorite again for the first time since July.




Key developments that should provide more direction to U.S. markets later on Monday:

* Federal Reserve Board Governor Christopher Waller and Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari speak




US growing at 3%+, with inflation just above target https://tmsnrt.rs/4052mTY

U.S. consumer sentiment by party affiliation https://reut.rs/3ObUtp4

PredictIt betting market shows Trump back as slight favorite for White House https://tmsnrt.rs/3Y6h7Dn

China continues to flirt with deflation https://reut.rs/3YlIwCu

Chinese war games around Taiwan https://reut.rs/4f65HXf


By Mike Dolan, editing by Gareth Jones
mike.dolan@thomsonreuters.com

</body></html>

Disclaimer: De entiteiten van de XM Group bieden diensten en toegang tot ons online handelsplatform op basis van uitsluitend-uitvoering, waardoor een persoon de beschikbare content op of via de website kan bekijken en/of gebruiken, zonder dat dit is bedoeld voor wijziging of uitbreiding. Dergelijk(e) toegang en gebruik vallen onder: (i) de algemene voorwaarden; (ii) risicowaarschuwingen; en de (iii) volledige disclaimer. Dergelijke content wordt daarom alleen aangeboden als algemene informatie. Wees u er daarnaast vooral van bewust dat de inhoud op ons online handelsplatform geen verzoek of aanbieding omvat om transacties op de financiële markten uit te voeren. Het beleggen op welke financiële markt dan ook vormt een aanzienlijk risico voor uw vermogen.

Alle materialen die op ons online handelsplatform worden gepubliceerd zijn bedoeld voor educatieve/informatieve doeleinden en omvatten geen – en moeten niet worden beschouwd als het bevatten van – financieel, vermogensbelastings- of handelsadvies en aanbevelingen, of een overzicht van onze handelsprijzen, of een aanbod of aanvraag van een transactie in financiële instrumenten of ongevraagde financiële promoties voor u.

Alle content van derden, alsmede content die is voorbereid door XM, zoals opinies, nieuws, onderzoeken, analyses, prijzen en andere informatie of koppelingen naar externe websites op deze website worden aangeboden op een 'zoals-ze-zijn'-basis, als algemene marktcommentaren, en vormen geen beleggingsadvies. Voor zover dat content wordt beschouwd als beleggingsonderzoek, moet u zich ervan bewust zijn en accepteren dat de content niet bedoeld was en niet is voorbereid in overeenstemming met de wettelijke vereisten die zijn opgesteld om de onafhankelijkheid van beleggingsonderzoek te bevorderen en als zodanig onder de geldende wetgeving en richtlijnen moet worden beschouwd als marketingcommunicatie. Zorg ervoor dat u onze Mededeling over niet-onafhankelijk beleggingsonderzoek en risicowaarschuwing in verband met de voorgaande informatie doorneemt en begrijpt; die kunt u hier lezen.

Risicowaarschuwing: Uw vermogen loopt risico. Hefboomproducten zijn mogelijk niet voor iedereen geschikt. Lees onze informatie over risico's.