US stock futures are weaker to start the new quarter but have cut overnight losses by more than a third, as the first US government shutdown in nearly seven years begins. The first shutdown during Trump 1.0 lasted 3 days and the second shutdown 35 days: how long will this one last? As of 8:00am ET, S&P futures are down 0.4%, but well off session lows while Nasdaq futures drop 0.5%. Gold futures, up almost 1%, continue their advance toward $4,000. Pre-mkt, we are seeing a risk-off tone in US assets, including USD weakness, helping buttress international markets where Eurostoxx 50 set a new intraday ATH led by health care and communication sectors. Mag7 names are mostly lower with Semis also pressured; NKE gains 3% post solid earnings. The yield curve is twisting steeper. Commodities are weaker ex-Precious Metals with silver outperforming gold. With Friday’s NFP release all but certain to be delayed, ADP takes on heightened importance today; we also receive ISM-Mfg, construction spending, vehicle sales, and mtge applications.
In premarket trading, Magnificent Seven stocks are all lower (Apple -0.3%, Amazon -0.7%, Tesla -0.3%, Nvidia -0.5%, Alphabet -0.7%, Meta Platforms -0.7%, Microsoft -0.7%)
AES Corp. (AES) rises 14% as BlackRock’s Global Infrastructure Partners LP is in advanced talks to acquire the power company, according to people familiar with the matter.
Corteva (CTVA) inches 1% higher after announcing plans to separate into two independent companies, one comprising its current crop protection business and the other its current seed business.
Lithium Americas (LAC) rises 32% after Secretary of Energy Chris Wright told Bloomberg TV that the US government agreed to acquire a stake in the company.
Marvell Technology Inc. (MRVL) falls 2.5% after TD Cowen cut its recommendation on the chipmaker to hold from buy, citing limited visibility in a key vertical.
Nike (NKE) climbs 3% after the sneaker retailer reported first-quarter revenue that beat the average analyst estimate, a sign its focus around specific sports such as running and basketball are starting to pay off.
Sunrun Inc. (RUN) rises 5% after Jefferies raised its recommendation on the solar energy company to buy, citing cash and growth potential.
Veeco Instruments (VECO) rises 4% after announcing plans to merge with Axcelis Technologies (ACLS). Axcelis falls 1.7%.
In corporate news, Apple says it did nothing wrong in choosing to partner with OpenAI — rather than Musk’s xAI — when it added generative AI to its iPhone operating system. Goldman Sachs is said to be among a cohort of financial firms planning to open offices in Kuwait. Lithium Americas shares surged after Secretary of Energy Chris Wright told Bloomberg TV that the US government agreed to acquire a stake in the company.
The US government shut down after a midnight funding deadline as Trump and Congressional Democrats clashed over health-care spending. With important economic reports now on hold, traders fear the loss of visibility will leave markets in the dark on the outlook for monetary policy. Fiona Boal, global head of equities at S&P Dow Jones Indices, said investor concern would focus on how long the shutdown may last, the disruption to economic data and potential job cuts.
The Congressional Budget Office estimates that about 750,000 employees will be furloughed at a cost per day of $400 million in lost compensation. The Trump administration’s plan to fire federal workers outright could also drive jobless claims higher at a time when employment already looks fragile.
“Government shutdowns in the US are rarely market-moving in and of themselves, but the timing matters,” said Nina Stanojevic, investment specialist at St James’s Place. “This one comes at a point where the Fed is data dependent. The absence of clean data can increase volatility.”
While the next Federal Reserve meeting is still four weeks away, policymakers might have to make decisions on an unclear picture, with the labor market softening and inflation hovering above target.
“In that case, a rate cut is likely to happen, but the uncertainty may lead to a change in expectations and increased volatility,” said Daniela Sabin Hathorn, senior market analyst at Capital.com. Money markets are currently pricing in a 90% chance of a quarter-point cut this month, and almost a 70% probability of another by year-end.
Shutdown aside, which according to many won’t have a negative impact on risk assets, traders will be wondering if technology can continue to provide upside momentum for the overall market as the final quarter of 2025 begins. Compared to earlier this year, the Magnificent 7 have had less of a role in recent gains, with some investors looking to the AI supply chain rather than the major names.
Still, the AI buzz is alive and well. There’s about $7 trillion of investment needed to finance the rapid growth of AI, according to Hadley Peer Marshall, CFO at Brookfield Asset Management. The equity buying spree has left aggregate positioning just above neutral, meaning there is still dry powder for more chasing or dip buying into typically positive fourth-quarter seasonality, according to Barclays strategists.
On the policy front, the Fed’s Logan said policymakers should be cautious about considering additional rate cuts while inflation remains above target and the labor market relatively balanced. Meanwhile, Taiwan has pushed back on a US request to move chip production stateside to cover half of America’s demand.
Unlike the US, European stocks gained 0.4%, driven mostly by pharmaceutical stocks as Pfizer’s drug pricing deal provides relief on the industry’s outlook. Here are some of the biggest movers on Wednesday:
Greggs shares rally as much as 13% after the baker said trading improved in August and September and that its cost inflation outlook has improved, helping it to reiterate its full-year expectations.
European drugmakers rise following Pfizer’s drug-pricing agreement with US President Donald Trump, which JPMorgan analysts say could be a potential bellwether for the sector and “reassure investors over a broadly manageable impact.”
Ambu shares advance as much as 11% after the Danish health-care equipment maker increased its five-year revenue target and reiterated its Ebit margin goal for the fiscal year ending September 2028.
Pirelli shares rose as much as 2.4% in Milan after Reuters reported that Chinese shareholder Sinochem might consider selling its stake in the Italian tire maker.
Arcadis jumps as much as 9.1%, after the provider of consulting and engineering services started repurchasing its own shares.
Soitec shares rise much as 7.7% after the wafer maker said CEO Pierre Barnabé would step down due to personal reasons.
Pharming shares rise as much as 7.1% after the Dutch biopharmaceutical company said its supplemental new drug application for leniolisib to treat a rare primary immunodeficiency in children was granted priority review by the US FDA.
European sportswear stocks are on the move after US peer Nike reported better-than-expected first-quarter sales.
Tate & Lyle falls as much as 11.5%, dropping to the lowest since July 2009, after the ingredients company said in a pre-close statement that it experienced a slowdown in market demand as the first half progressed.
European defense stocks are falling on Wednesday as EU leaders meet informally in Copenhagen to discuss how to deal with the threat posed by drone incursions into the bloc’s airspace.
Flutter UK shares fall as much as 5.4%, extending steep declines on Tuesday amid concern over the competitive threat posed by prediction platforms being offered by the likes of Robinhood and Kalshi.
Earlier in the session, Asian stocks were mixed, as gains in South Korea, India and Taiwan were overshadowed by declines in Japanese shares on concerns over the impact of a US government shutdown. Hong Kong and Chinese markets were shut for holidays. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index held steady, as gains in the likes of TSMC and Samsung balanced out declines in stocks like Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group and BHP Group. Japanese and Australian blue chips weighed most heavily on the regional benchmark. Most other markets traded in the green. Japan’s monetary policy is moving in the opposite direction as the world generally moves toward easing. Stocks edged higher as the central bank left its benchmark interest rate unchanged, while signaling there may be scope to ease in coming months to support an economy taking a hit from US tariffs. Australian shares fell for a second day after the Reserve Bank left its key interest rate unchanged.
In FX, the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index fell 0.1% to take losses into a fourth day. The shutdown threatens to delay key economic reports used to gauge the Federal Reserve’s path on interest-rate cuts; the yen is outperforming and the Swiss franc lagging.
In rates, treasuries are mixed with the curve steeper as US day begins after plying small ranges overnight. Treasury front-end and belly yields are about 1bp richer on the day with long end cheaper by about 1bp, steepening 5s10s, 5s30s spreads by 1.3bp and 2.4bp; US 10-year is 2bps lower near 4.13% with bunds and gilts in the sector trading slightly cheaper. European bonds weaker, with German 10-year yields up three basis points. US Treasuries are little changed. Eurozone inflation quickened in September, in line with economist expectations. IG dollar issuance slate is scant and a subdued session is expected amid the government shutdown. September’s $207.5 billion haul was the fifth-highest month on record and this year’s highest by a $21 billion margin. Focal points of US session include ADP’s private-sector payrolls data, which may hold more sway than usual as the shutdown threatens to delay the release of Thursday’s weekly jobless claims and the monthly jobs report slated for Oct. 3.
In commodities, oil prices wiped out an earlier rise to extend declines into a third session, Brent sliding below $66/barrel and WTI slipping under $62. Gold is extending its run, up by $34 and putting $3,900/oz in sight.
Looking at today’s calendar, US economic data slate includes September ADP employment change (8:15am), September final S&P Global US manufacturing PMI (9:45am), September ISM manufacturing and August construction spending (10am). Fed speaker slate includes Barkin (12:15pm) and Goolsbee (5pm).
Market Snapshot
S&P 500 mini -0.5%
Nasdaq 100 mini -0.6%
Russell 2000 mini -0.5%
Stoxx Europe 600 +0.5%
DAX +0.3%
CAC 40 +0.3%
10-year Treasury yield little changed at 4.15%
VIX +0.5 points at 16.82
Bloomberg Dollar Index -0.1% at 1198.96
euro +0.1% at $1.1747
WTI crude -0.9% at $61.81/barrel
Government Shutdown
The US government officially went into shutdown, with a majority of operations halted after no funding deal was reached in the Senate, marking the first shutdown since 2018.
House and Senate GOP leaders will hold a 10:00ET/15:00BST news conference Wednesday, according to Politico, citing sources.
Top Overnight News
The US government shut down at midnight for the first time since 2019 — and the third under Donald Trump — after Democrats blocked a Republican stopgap funding package. There were no signs of a resolution forthcoming. BBG
The White House pulled the nomination of EJ Antoni to lead the BLS. Brian Quintenz is also no longer Trump’s pick to chair the CFTC, after weeks of speculation about his stalled candidacy. BBG
Republican lawmakers said that China won’t begin purchasing US agricultural products anytime soon after a closed-door briefing. As part of the fallout from Trump’s trade war, China has yet to book a single shipment of US soybeans this season, fueling anxiety among farmers as this year’s harvest moves ahead. China is the world’s largest soybean importer. BBG
US trade representative Jamieson Greer has warned that Washington will continue to hit its trading partners with tariffs even if some are ruled illegal by the Supreme Court later this year. The Supreme Court is set to hear cases brought by businesses challenging Trump’s use of emergency powers to impose tariffs in the first week of Nov. FT
Taiwan pushed back on a US request to move chip production stateside to cover half of America’s demand. BBG
Japan’s business sentiment among large manufacturers improved for a second straight quarter, according to the Tankan survey. South Korea’s adjusted exports fell 6.1% year on year in September. BBG
India’s central bank kept its policy rate unchanged (5.5%) as U.S. tariffs continued to cloud the South Asian economy’s outlook, while signaling that it remains open to further easing. WSJ
Eurozone inflation for Sept is right inline with expectations, including headline at +2.2% (up from +2% in Aug) and core at +2.3% (same as Aug), a development that’s a modest relief given the German CPI on Tues ran ahead of expectations. BBG
Fed’s Logan (2026 voter) said the Fed will be cautious in any further reductions and that the US may need additional labour market slack to reach the 2% inflation target. She noted resilient consumption and business investment show policy is only modestly restrictive, adding that inflation expectations cannot be taken for granted and that financial conditions are now a tailwind, further evidence that policy is modestly restrictive. Logan said it is unclear how much further the Fed can cut before hitting neutral and warned that even excluding tariff impacts, inflation may be as high as 2.4%, driven by non-housing services, according to Reuters.
Fed to ease Morgan Stanley’s (MS) capital requirements following a review: BBG
US Energy Secretary said the US government is taking an equity stake in Lithium Americas (LAC), via Bloomberg TV; US DoE to take a 5% stake in Lithium Americas (LAC): ZH
BlackRock’s (BLK) GIP is said to be nearing USD 38bln takeover of utility AES (AES): FT
Nike Inc (NKE) Q1 2026 (USD): EPS 0.49 (exp. 0.27), Revenue 11.72bln (exp. 11.00bln). Gross margin decreased 320bps to 42.2%, primarily due to lower average selling price, reflecting higher discounts and channel mix, as well as higher tariffs in North America. CFO said tariffs will cost approximately USD 1.5bln, higher than the prior estimate of around USD 1bln, and expects Q2 revenue to fall by low single digits versus estimates of a 3.1% decline, according to Reuters. Shares rose 4.5% after hours.
Trade/Tariffs
US Deputy Secretary of State encouraged investment from South Korea, with the US and South Korea holding a working group on visas for South Korean businesses investing in the US, according to a statement.
South Korea and the US released a joint statement on a foreign exchange policy agreement, pledging to avoid manipulating exchange rates to gain an unfair competitive advantage. The statement did not mention a bilateral currency swap or South Korea’s state-run pension fund. Both sides agreed that FX market intervention should be reserved for combating excessive volatility and would be considered for both disorderly depreciation and appreciation. They also agreed to exchange FX intervention operations on a monthly basis and said any macroprudential or capital flow measures will not target exchange rates, according to Reuters.
Taiwan rejected a US request to produce half of its chips locally, according to Bloomberg.
Japanese Economy Minister Akazawa said they will operate a USD 550bln US-bound investment without causing FX impact, suggesting USD 550bln is the range where there is no FX impact, according to Reuters.
European Commission is reportedly looking to sign the EU-Mercosur partnership agreement on December 5th, via Politico citing diplomats.
European Commission reportedly plans to raise import tariffs on foreign steel to similar levels as US and Canada, via Reuters citing sources; expected to lift the steel import tariff level to 50%.
A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk
APAC stocks traded mixed following modest gains on Wall Street, with focus on the length of the US government shutdown after the Senate rejected the House-passed CR, whilst Chinese participants were away for Golden Week. ASX 200 fluctuated between small gains and losses, supported by gold miners at the top of the index, while Energy and Tech lagged. BHP came under pressure after China banned its iron ore cargoes amid a pricing dispute. Nikkei 225 underperformed as the regional laggard despite a relatively mixed BoJ Tankan Survey. KOSPI was modestly firmer after above-forecast trade data, whilst reports suggested the US and South Korea agreed to establish a visa desk for Korean firms investing in the US. The two sides also issued a joint statement on foreign exchange policy, though it did not mention a bilateral currency swap or South Korea’s state-run pension fund. Nifty 50 traded flat and was little changed as the RBI kept its repo rate unchanged at 5.50% as expected in a unanimous decision, maintaining a neutral policy stance. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp were shut for Golden Week and will return next Thursday.
Top Asian News
A BoJ official, following the Tankan Survey, said firms were divided on how they viewed the impact of US tariffs. Some suggested the US-Japan deal has reduced uncertainty and improved the business outlook, while others saw a worsening outlook, according to Reuters.
RBI kept its repo rate unchanged at 5.50%, as expected, in a unanimous decision, maintaining a neutral policy stance, with 2026 CPI now seen at 2.6% (prev. 3.1%). RBI Governor noted the Indian economy shows strength and headline inflation has significantly moderated. He said rationalisation of GST will have a sobering impact on inflation while stimulating consumption and growth, and added that tariffs will moderate exports. He highlighted the global economy is proving more resilient than anticipated but the outlook remains clouded amid elevated policy uncertainty, according to Reuters.
European bourses largely firmer, Euro Stoxx 50 +0.3%. Regional outperformance seen in the FTSE 100 +0.7% and SMI +1.5% on account of gains for Healthcare names after Pfizer’s pricing deal. More broadly, sectors are mixed. Energy initially firmer but has succumbed to fresh pressure in the underlying benchmarks, Tech lags and drags on the DAX 40 +0.4%. Numerous individual movers of note, but not changing the macro picture: Puma & Adidas firmer after Nike (+3.2% pre-market); BNP Paribas hit by Bloomberg reports of changes to Basel rules – see European updates for more.
Top European News
BoE’s Mann says that UK monetary policy is relatively loose, via Bloomberg TV. Adds that tighter interest rates would not currently be appropriate.
FX
USD falters on shutdown concerns. Given the shutdown, alternative labour reports to Friday’s currently-cancelled Payrolls will draw greater importance. DXY delved as low as 97.46 (lowest since 24th Sept) before recovering modestly across the European morning.
JPY tops the G10 leaderboard, USD/JPY briefly slipped below 147.00. Support for the Yen is partially a by-product of its safe-haven appeal as the US government enters into shutdown. Additionally, the Yen is also being bolstered by the Japanese Tankan survey, which was mixed/in-line, but ultimately viewed by markets as not being enough to derail expectations of a BoJ rate hike next month.
Sterling and Euro both firmer vs the USD. Sterling unaffected by BoE’s Mann or the regions PMIs, no move in the EU on its data either including Flash HICP. GBP/USD surpassed its 50DMA @ 1.3463 with focus on a test of 1.35 to the upside while EUR/USD got as high as 1.1778 before fading as the USD came off worst.
Antipodeans diverge with AUD unable to capitalise on the softer USD with the risk tone capping and with attention on the regions PMIs (revised lower) and Tuesday’s reporting around iron ore cargoes. Kiwi unaffected by the latter points and as such is a touch firmer NZD/USD looking to the 200-DMA at 0.5844.
Fixed Income
Treasuries are currently holding around the unchanged mark, though the benchmark has posted losses of a handful of ticks at worst this morning. Unable to materially benefit from the deteriorating risk tone, though the complex is off worst in a narrow 112-12 to 112-16+ band.
As a reminder, in 2018 Fitch warned that an extended shutdown could spark a downgrade to the US’ AAA rating (currently AA+). Since, we have seen the major agencies all warn about increasing US budgetary and general fiscal risks, a point that becomes more acute during a shutdown.
Narrative similar for Bunds, hit a 128.24 low early doors but lifted off this as the European morning progressed. However, the benchmark was sent back to lows after a particularly weak 2035 auction, continuing the deteriorated trend of such outings.
Gilts lag, hit by the FTSE 100 extending to highs given pharmaceutical outperformance and reports in the Guardian that Chancellor Reeves will be lifting the two-child benefit cap. Removing the cap would cost the exchequer around GBP 3.5bln/yr. Benchmark lower by 30 ticks at worst, but is off its 90.54 trough.
Commodities
Crude was initially contained after the OPEC Secretariat’s pushback to reports around a 500k BPD production adjustment by the OPEC 8. Since, a bout of pronounced selling pressure has emerged. No clear or overt fresh fundamental driver behind the move, though it is potentially a function of increased attention on Saudi Arabian Oil Co. cutting benchmark prices of LPG by more than forecast.
As it stands, WTI and Brent are currently holding modestly in the red but off lows in respective USD 61.62-62.89/bbl and USD 65.32-66.57/bbl parameters.
Spot gold has rebounded from the profit taking seen on Tuesday, climbing across the European morning as the risk tone got hit by the government shutdown. While the general risk tone is off worst, XAU is yet to lose its allure and remains near its latest ATH of USD 3895/oz.
3M LME Copper is marginally firmer but veering towards the lower end of the day’s current USD 10.26-10.36k band. Focus primarily on the overarching macro narrative as outlined above. While only modest, the fact the space is firmer during the broader market pressure we are seeing and with China away for Golden Week is notable.
Geopolitics: Middle East
Yemen’s Houthis said they attacked the Dutch-flagged ship Minervagracht with a cruise missile, according to Reuters.
IRGC says “The range of missiles will be increased to any point Tehran deems necessary in response to European demands to restrict Iran’s missile capabilities”, via Sky News Arabia.
Hamas has informed mediators of the need to provide international guarantees for a complete Israeli withdrawal and ensure that the ceasefire is not violated, Sky News Arabia citing sources.
Geopolitics: Russia-Ukraine
Ukrainian President Zelensky warned the situation at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant is critical, noting that Russian shelling is obstructing efforts to restore external power supply and that one backup diesel generator has stopped working, according to Reuters.
The IAEA said it is engaging with both sides of the military conflict to restore off-site power at Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, according to Reuters.
Finnish President Stubb said, on potential US sanctions on Russia, that US President Trump is moving from the “carrot” to the “stick”, via Politico; when asked what the “stick” would be, he said a “driver”.
European leaders will not agree on the latest Russian sanctions today, via Radio Free Europe’s Jozwiak; hopes that European ambassadors can get a green light on Friday.
Italy’s Energy Minister Fratin says the EU has not reached a deal to ban Russian LNG before 2028 due to some countries not having alternative suppliers.
US Event Calendar
7:00 am: Sep 26 MBA Mortgage Applications, prior 0.6%
8:15 am: Sep ADP Employment Change, est. 50.5k, prior 54k
9:45 am: Sep F S&P Global U.S. Manufacturing PMI, est. 52, prior 52
10:00 am: Sep ISM Manufacturing, est. 49, prior 48.7
10:00 am: Sep ISM Prices Paid, est. 62.7, prior 63.7
10:00 am: Aug Construction Spending MoM, est. -0.1%, prior -0.07%
DB’s Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap
As it’s the start of Q4, Henry will shortly be releasing our latest performance review for Q3. It was a strong quarter overall, with global equities and bonds advancing. In part, that was driven by ongoing resilience on the growth side, as the tariff impact wasn’t as negative as many feared at the start of July. But the Fed’s move to cut rates in September offered further support, particularly for US Treasuries, which in turn pushed gold prices to their strongest monthly performance since 2011 and the S&P 500 to its best September in 15 years. However, it wasn’t all good news, and fiscal fears in Europe put long-end bonds under fresh pressure there, particularly in France. See the full report in your inboxes shortly.
With Q4 underway, all eyes are now on the US government shutdown, which has just begun as we go to press, marking the first in the US in almost seven years — and the third one during President Trump’s administration. Last minute attempts at a funding deal that could muster the necessary 60 votes in the Senate failed yesterday, with a 55-45 vote on a stopgap bill that had been earlier approved by the Republican-controlled House. Three Democrats voted for the bill and all but one Republican. There are no signs of an imminent compromise between the White House and the Democrats, and the Republican leadership in the Senate suggested that any further votes may not take place until after the Yom Kippur holiday on Thursday. Earlier in the day, President Trump reiterated the threat of dismissing “a lot” of federal workers during the shutdown, though it’s not clear how well formed or implementable such plans are.
Interestingly, we looked in yesterday’s chart of the day at this (link here), and found that markets historically have taken shutdowns in their stride. In fact, the S&P 500 rose in the last 6 shutdowns, and 10yr Treasury yields came down in the last 5. Clearly there were other factors in operation as well in these periods, but it shows that for markets at least, the usual pattern is to look through what’s happening.
In practical terms, a big impact for this week is that we’re flying blind on the economic data front. So as it stands, we won’t get a jobs report on Friday, as the BLS aren’t releasing new data. Contrary to our prior expectations the Labor Department yesterday said we won’t see US jobless claims in the shutdown either. We thought we might see it released as the States compile the data. The BLS produce the CPI report on October 15th too, so if we’re shut down for long, that could be affected as well. That isn’t out of the question, as the last shutdown in 2018-19 (also under Mr Trump) lasted for a record 35 days. So other measures, like the ADP’s report of private payrolls today, could well take on added significance until we get the BLS numbers again.
Markets brushed off some initial shutdown jitters yesterday, with the S&P 500 (+0.41%) recovering to close less than 0.1% from its all-time high, while the NASDAQ (+0.30%) and the Dow Jones (+0.18%) also advanced. So overall investors remained hopeful that the issues will be sorted over the coming days, with little wider impact on the economy or earnings. The Mag-7 (+0.11%) were mixed with Nivida (+2.60%) reaching another all-time high, but Meta (-1.21%) and Amazon (-1.17%) losing ground.
Earlier in the day, sentiment had taken a bit of a hit from some underwhelming US data. The Conference Board’s consumer confidence indicator fell by more than expected in September, down to a five-month low of 94.2 (vs. 96.0 expected). Moreover, the latest JOLTS report offered further momentum on that front, because it showed ongoing weakness in the labour market into August. For instance, the quits rate of those voluntarily leaving their job fell to 1.9%, which is the lowest since December, and suggests that people are less confident in their prospects. Plus the job openings number ticked up a bit more than expected, rising to 7.227m (vs. 7.2m expected). So that saw investors price in more rate cuts over the months ahead, with 83bps priced in by June 2026, up +2.2bps on the day. Front-end Treasuries rallied following the weaker data, with 2yr yields closing -1.3bps lower at 3.61%, but this was accompanied by a decent curve steepening with 10yr and 30yr yields up +1.1bps and +2.7bps to 4.15% and 4.73% respectively.
Those moves came as Fed speakers were mostly non-committal on the likely pace of rate cuts. Boston Fed President Collins “It may be appropriate to ease the policy rate a bit further this year – but the data will have to show that”, while Dallas Fed President Logan suggested that “there may be relatively little room to make additional rate cuts”. And Vice Chair Jefferson avoided any signal on the policy path, noting that “both sides of our mandate are under pressure”.
Over in Europe, the focus was on the latest inflation numbers, although they didn’t lead to a big market reaction.
Admittedly, the German numbers surprised on the upside, with the EU-harmonised measure ticking up to +2.4% in September (vs. +2.2% expected). However, that was counteracted by a downside surprise from France, where inflation rose by less-than-expected to +1.1% (vs. +1.3% expected). So in aggregate, the numbers didn’t have big implications for the Euro Area-wide print, which is out later this morning, and wasn’t seen as affecting the ECB’s reaction function.
That backdrop meant sovereign bond yields were little changed across Europe, with yields on 10yr bunds (+0.4bps), OATs (+0.2bps) and BTPs (+0.1bps) barely increasing. However, there was a stronger performance for equities, with the STOXX 600 (+0.48%) closing at one-month high, and the UK’s FTSE 100 (+0.54%) moved up to a record high.
In the commodity space, Brent oil prices fell by another -1.40% to $67.02/bbl amid reports that OPEC+ will discuss accelerating the reversal of remaining production cuts at their meeting on October 5. Reuters suggested that the next production increase in November could be 2-3 times larger than the +137kbbl/day due in October.
Asian equity markets are quiet, due to holidays in China and Hong Kong for National Day. Markets in mainland China will remain closed until the middle of next week. Throughout the region, Japanese stocks are underperforming, with the Nikkei and the Topix declining by -0.80% and -1.27% respectively, driven by concerns over potential interest rate hikes after a survey showed increasing confidence among the country’s largest manufacturers (details below). Elsewhere, the S&P/ASX 200 (-0.15%) is edging lower again after the RBA struck a hawkish tone on forward guidance yesterday. The KOSPI (+0.86%) is bucking the regional negative trend.
Coming back to Japan, sentiment among the country’s major manufacturers has shown improvement for the second consecutive quarter, increasing by 1 point to +14 compared to the results from June. The index for large non-manufacturers has held steady at 34, close to its peak level since the early 1990s. In addition, large enterprises across various sectors intend to raise their business investments by 12.5% for the current fiscal year, an increase from the previously projected 11.5%. Markets are pricing in around a 70% chance of a hike in October with two big events to come later this week. A speech from Governor Ueda on Friday and the conclusion of the LDP leadership election over the weekend.
To the day ahead now, and data releases from the US include the ISM manufacturing, and the ADP’s report of private payrolls for September. In the Euro Area, we’ll get the flash CPI print for September. And globally, there’s the September manufacturing PMIs as well. From central banks, we’ll hear from ECB Vice President de Guindos, the ECB’s Kazimir, Kocher, Simkus, Nagel, the Fed’s Barkin, and the BoE’s Mann.