HomeContributorsFundamental AnalysisFocus On UK-EU Meeting Later Today In Attempt To Break The Deadlock...

Focus On UK-EU Meeting Later Today In Attempt To Break The Deadlock In Brexit Negotiations

Notes/Observations

  • Focus on Wednesday dinner between UK PM Johnson and EU Commission President von der Leyen in Brussels; meeting viewed as last-ditch attempt to salvage a Brexit trade deal
  • Risk appetite trying to find some tailwinds as last-ditch Brexit talks and hopes for more US stimulus measures continue

Asia:

  • China Nov CPI registered its 1st decline since Oct 2009 (Y/Y: -0.5% v 0.0%e)

Europe:

  • UK PM Johnson to meet EU Commission chief Von der Leyen in Brussels on Wedfor talks on a Brexit deal. Progress at a political level might allow negotiations to resume over the coming days but it was important to be realistic that an agreement might not be possible

Americas:

  • Trump administration has put together a relief package that would offer far leaner federal unemployment benefits in exchange for another round of stimulus checks worth $600 per person and $600 per child
  • Treasury Sec Mnuchin proposes $916B relief plan which includes money for state and local governments and robust liability protections for businesses, schools and universities
  • House Speaker Pelosi (D) and Senate Minority Leader Schumer (D) call Mnuchin’s $916B stimulus proposal as ‘unacceptable’ citing it cuts funding allocated in the bipartisan bill for unemployment insurance

Energy:

  • Weekly API Crude Oil Inventories: +1.1M v +4.1M prior

SPEAKERS/FIXED INCOME/FX/COMMODITIES/ERRATUM

Equities

  • Indices [Stoxx600 +0.5% at #, FTSE +0.61% at 6,598.84, DAX +1.07% at 13,420.75, CAC-40 +0.32% at 5,578.35, IBEX-35 +0.31% 8,253.00, FTSE MIB -0.07% at 22,038.50, SMI +0.44% at 10,439.66, S&P 500 Futures +0.26%]
  • Market Focal Points/Key Themes: European indices open higher across the board and stayed in the green as the session progressed (FTSE MIB the notable exception); sectors leading to the upside include materials and financials consumer discretionary and technology sectors among those underperforming; reportedly Unicredit considering merger with BPER; Tesco annnounces closure of Asia business; earnings expected in the upcoming US session include Slack Technologies, Campbell Soup and DoorDash

Equities

  • Consumer discretionary: Modern Times [MTGB.SE] +10% (acquisition), Howden Joinery Group [HWDN.UK] +7% (trading update)
  • Consumer staples: British American Tobacco [BATS.UK] -1% (trading update)
  • Healthcare: Roche [ROG.CH] +1% (partners with Moderna)
  • Industrials: Balfour Beatty [BBY.UK] +1.5% (trading update)
  • Technology: STMicro [STM.FR] -11% (mid-term targets), Signify [LIGHT.NL] -5% (CMD update)

Speakers

  • UK Govt official Gove stated that the resolution on Internal Market Bill helped the path to trade agreement on Brexit. He added that it would be very difficult to get a Brexit deal unless the EU moved. He added there was scope for compromise on fisheries
  • German Chancellor Merkel commented in Parliament that fighting the pandemic conditions was a requirement for economic growth. Would l not be able to do enough vaccinations in Q1 to bring about a major change in the course of the pandemic. All in flux ahead of Thursday’s EU Leader Summit. Still a chance for a Brexit deal but level Playing Field must be ensure. Not sure we would get an agreement on rule of law; great uncertainty was surrounding EU budget
  • Italy PM Conte commented that he hoped EU Recovery Fund became permanent
  • Ireland Dep PM Varadkar reiterated stance of seeing chances as 50-50 probability of Brexit trade agreement occurring
  • Ireland Foreign Min Coveney: UK agreement on Northern Ireland shows that UK seeks to rebuild trust
  • Ireland Debt Agency (NTMA) on 2021 issuance: To sell €16-20B in debt during year
  • Poland Dep PM Gowin saw room for compromise on EU budget that is acceptable for both Poland and Hungary; deal should be agreed upon by Friday at the latest. Veto of budget should only be a last resort
  • Russia Central Bank (CBR) Gov Nabiullina stated that could cut key rate below 4.0% level but not viewed as the base-line scenario. Saw end-Dec inflation at 4.5% with CPI peaking around 5.0% in Feb
  • China Foreign Ministry spokesperson reiterated its opposition to unilateral US actions on sanctions. Hoped Australia could see the Belt and Road Initiative (BDI) in an objective manner

Currencies/Fixed Income

  • USD was slightly weaker despite another quiet trading day. Risk appetite trying to find some tailwinds as last-ditch Brexit talks and hopes for more US stimulus measures circulate. Dealers looking ahead to Thursday’s ECB decision and ongoing Brexit negotiations
  • Focus on Wednesday dinner between UK PM Johnson and EU Commission President von der Leyen in Brussels; meeting viewed as last-ditch attempt to salvage a Brexit trade deal. GBP/USD was back above the 1.34 level after UK official Gove noted there was room for compromise on the key issue of fisheries.
  • EUR/USD steady at 1.2125 area ahead of Thursday’s ECB policy decision.

Economic Data

  • (DE) Germany Oct Current Account Balance: €22.5B v €21.0Be; Trade Balance: €19.4B v €18.5Be; Exports M/M: 0.8% v 1.3%e; Imports M/M: 0.3% v 1.2%e
  • (DE) Germany Q3 Labor Costs Q/Q: -1.7% v +1.0% prior; Y/Y: 1.7% v 3.9% prior
  • (NO) Norway Oct Overall GDP M/M: -0.7% v +0.7% prior; GDP Mainland M/M: 1.2% v 0.4%e
  • (DK) Denmark Oct Current Account Balance (DKK): 10.2B v 13.0B prior; Trade Balance (DKK): 5.1B v 7.2B prior
  • (ES) Spain Oct Industrial Production M/M: 0.6% v 0.0%e; Y/Y: -1.6% v -2.7%e; Industrial Output NSA (unadj) Y/Y: -6.1%v -0.6% prior
  • (ZA) South Africa Nov CPI M/M: 0.0% v 0.1%e; Y/Y: 3.2% v 3.2%e
  • (ZA) South Africa Nov CPI Core M/M: 0.0% v 0.1%e; Y/Y: 3.3% v 3.4%e
  • (CN) China Nov M2 Money Supply Y/Y: 10.7% v 10.5%e; M1 Money Supply Y/Y: 10.0% v 9.4%e; M0 Money Supply Y/Y: 10.3% v 10.3%e
  • (CN) China Nov New Yuan Loans (CNY): 1.430T v 1.450Te
  • (CN) China Nov Aggregate Financing (CNY): 2.130T v 2.075Te
  • (CZ) Czech Nov International Reserves: $160.0B v $157.2B prior
  • (ZA) South Africa Nov Sacci Business Confidence: 93.4 v 85.0e

Fixed income Issuance

  • (IN) India sold total INR160B vs. INR160B indicated in 3-month, 6-month and 12-month bills
  • (UK) DMO sold £2.5B in 0.625% July 2035 Gilts; Avg Yield: 0.612% v 0.676% prior; bid-to-cover: 2.95x v 2.44x prior; Tail: 0.0bps v 0.1bps prior
  • (IT) Italy Debt Agency (Tesoro) sold €7.0B vs. €7.0B to sell 12-month bills; Avg Yield: -0.498% v -0.478% prior; Bid-to-cover: 1.83x v 1.84x prior
  • (SE) Sweden solds total SEK25.0B vs. SEK25.0B indicated in 3-month and 12-month bills

Looking Ahead

  • 05:30 (DE) Germany to sell €3.0B in 0% in Dec 2022 Schatz
  • 05:30 (GR) Greece Debt Agency (PDMA) to sell €625M in 12-month bills
  • 05:30 (HU) Hungary Debt Agency (AKK) to sell 12-month Bills
  • 06:00 (BR) Brazil Dec IGP-M Inflation (1st Preview): 2.1%e v 2.7% prior
  • 06:00 (ZA) South Africa Oct Retail Sales M/M: 1.6%e v 1.1% prior; Y/Y: -2.3%e v -2.7% prior
  • 06:00 (RU) Russia OFZ Bond auction (if any)
  • 06:30 (UK) (UK) DMO to sell £250M in 0.125% Aug 2048 index-linked Gilt; Real Yield: % v -2.291% prior; Bid-to-cover: x v 2.13x prior (Aug 5th 2020)
  • 07:00 (US) MBA Mortgage Applications w/e Dec 4th: No est v -0.6% prior
  • 07:00 (MX) Mexico Nov CPI M/M: 0.2%e v 0.6% prior; Y/Y: 3.4%e v 4.1% prior; CPI Core M/M: 0.0%e v 0.2% prior
  • 07:00 (UK) Weekly PM Question time in House
  • 08:00 (UK) Daily Baltic Dry Bulk Index
  • 09:30 (UR) Ukraine Nov CPI M/M: 1.1%e v 1.0% prior; Y/Y: 3.4%e v 2.6% prior
  • 09:45 (UK) BOE to buy £1.47B in APF Gilt purchase operation (7-20 years)
  • 10:00 (US) Oct Final Wholesale Inventories M/M: 0.9%e v 0.9% prelim; Wholesale Trade Sales M/M: No est v 0.1% prior
  • 10:00 (US) Oct JOLTS Job Openings: 6.300Me v 6.436M prior
  • 10:00 (CA) Bank of Canada (BOC) Interest Rate Decision: Expected to leave Interest Rates unchanged at 0.25%
  • 10:30 (US) Weekly DOE Oil Inventories
  • 13:00 (US) Treasury to sell 10-year notes
  • 14:00 (AR) Argentina Oct Industrial Production Y/Y: No est v 3.4% prior; Construction Activity Y/Y: No est v -3.9% prior
  • 14:00 (EU) UK PM Johnson meets EU Commission chief von der leyen for dinner in Brussels
  • 16:00 (NZ) New Zealand Nov Heavy Truckometer Index M/M: No est v -3.0% prior
  • 16:45 (NZ) New Zealand Nov Total Card Spending M/M: No est v 7.5% prior; Retail Card Spending M/M: No est v 8.8% prior
  • 17:00 (BR) Brazil Central Bank (BCB) Interest Rate Decision: expected to leave Selic Target Rate unchanged at 2.00%
  • 18:50 (JP) Japan Nov PPI M/M: 0.0%e v -0.1% prior; Y/Y: -2.2%e v -2.1% prior
  • 18:50 (JP) Japan Q4 BSI Large All Industry Q/Q: No est v 2 prior; Large Manufacturing Q/Q: No est v 0.1 prior
  • 19:00 (AU) Australia Dec Consumer Inflation Expectation Survey: No est v % prior
  • 19:01 (UK) Nov RICS House Price Balance: 63%e v 68% prior
  • 20:00 (PH) Philippines Oct Trade Balance: -$2.0Be v -$1.7B prior; Exports Y/Y: -0.1%e v +2.2% prior; Imports Y/Y: -15.6%e v -16.5% prior
  • 22:35 (JP) Japan to sell 20-Year JGB Bonds

 

Trade The News
Trade The Newshttp://www.tradethenews.com/
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.

Featured Analysis

Learn Forex Trading