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Top 5 Things to Know in the Market on Friday, 13th December

Published 12/13/2019, 06:30 AM
Updated 12/13/2019, 06:36 AM
© Reuters.

Investing.com -- China stays mum on the reported U.S. trade deal offer, as analysts see Beijing afraid of getting caught in a trap. The pound and U.K. stocks soar after a convincing election victory for Boris Johnson's Conservatives that paves the way for a formal withdrawal from the EU by the end of January at the latest. And Broadcom (NASDAQ:AVGO) promises a better year ahead after suffering from the U.S. ban on exports of sensitive components to Huawei. Here's what you need to know in financial markets on Friday, 13th December.

1. Radio silence from Beijing

China kept an awkward silence as it digested the reported offer by the U.S. to roll back some tariffs and cancel those due to come into force at the weekend, in return for guaranteed annual purchases of U.S. farm goods.

“Chinese authorities and official media so far haven’t given any information on China and the U.S. are close to a deal,” Hu Xijin, editor of the English-language Chinese publication Global Times, said via Twitter. “As the U.S. side released optimistic information through various channels, the Chinese side has basically kept silent. This is a delicate situation.”

Analysts argue that the offer by the White House may be perceived as a trap, saying that Beijing will resist being drawn into an agreement where its compliance can be easily and reliably measured.

2. U.K. assets surge on Conservative triumph

U.K. assets surged after an emphatic victory for Boris Johnson’s Conservatives lifted the political uncertainty over Brexit and banished the threat of a radical left-wing government.

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The pound consolidated against the dollar and euro after its biggest one-day gain in over two years. U.K. stocks also rose sharply, with homebuilders, banks, utilities and consumer stocks all figuring prominently.

Yields on U.K. government bonds hit their highest since the spring as risk appetite returned and the prospect of a big boost to public spending next year militated against any further interest rate cuts by the Bank of England.

3. Stocks set to open higher; retail sales data eyed

U.S. stocks are set to open higher on Friday, on a combination of trade hopes, greater clarity over Brexit in the wake of the U.K. election – and the commitment of the Federal Reserve to flood the market with liquidity over the year-end to ensure that last year’s bout of volatility isn’t repeated.

By 6:35 AM ET (1135 GMT), Dow futures were indicated up 141 points, or 0.5%, while the S&P 500 futures contract was up 0.4% and the Nasdaq 100 futures contract was up 0.5%.

The day's earnings and data calendars are light, with the highlight being retail sales data for November due at 8:30 AM ET (1330 GMT).

4. House committee to vote on articles of impeachment

The House Judiciary Committee will likely vote on two articles of impeachment, seeking to remove President Donald Trump for abuse of office and for obstructing the work of Congress.

The vote is shaping up to proceed on partisan lines, with GOP representatives still refusing to accept allegations that Trump pressured Ukraine, a U.S. ally, into investigating the son of Joe Biden in order to help his own re-election campaign. Trump allegedly withheld military aid approved by Congress for Ukraine, hoping to extract an announcement from President Volodymyr Zelensky that Hunter Biden was being investigated for corruption.

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If the vote passes the full House, Trump will be tried in the GOP-controlled Senate.

“There’s no chance the president is going to be removed from office,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell told Fox News on Thursday night.

5. Broadcom (NASDAQ:AVGO) predicts bounce-back

Broadcom (NASDAQ:AVGO) published weaker-than-expected figures for the final quarter of its year ending Nov. 3 but said revenue growth and profit would bounce back in the coming year.

The company has been hit harder than most in the sector by the protracted U.S. export ban on some items to Chinese telecom giant Huawei.

Elsewhere after the bell on Thursday, Oracle (NYSE:ORCL) said it would leave Safra Catz as sole CEO after the departure of Mark Hurd. Its latest quarterly profit beat expectations but revenue fell short.

Latest comments

The Winning Is Not Getting Old, At All.
"Analysts argue that the offer by the White House may be perceived as a trap, saying that Beijing will resist being drawn into an agreement where its compliance can be easily and reliably measured."... So China won't enter an agreement they can't cheat on easily? If that's the case why don't we just move production to a more honest country? Paying more at the store may actually cost us less overall.
How does Elon get introuble for ‘pumping’ a stock but Trump does on a daily?
Thing are going wrong part of this trade war I can see phase one deal will get done even at election day trade war will skip into a different direction of word of Trump's.
if that's the top things affecting the market or to watch… oh boy… Democrats care about nothing other than getting power, and will crash this country to get it. sad.
yes
Brexit is done, the weak impeachment brought by the dems should be gone by march. I don’t think the chinesse will agree to anything definetively until after the elections
What to expect? If everything is a scam.
Allow me to correct you on that note - the British people do not own the nation - the nation is owned by a handful of very wealthy people and the Crown - The British people own the public debt. The assets are owned by private people and private corporations, the Church and the Crown. Much of the assets in the UK aren't even owned by British nationals (companies or individuals). So what I think you're trying to say is, congratulations those in the UK who are now about to make vast commissions and backhanders, bribes, whatever you want to call them, from selling off what's left of Public asset to Trump and Putin - whichever is the higher bidder, whilst public debt will increase massively
Well they keep voting to abused
So ....because the Brits didn't want to be controlled by unelected EU officials in Brussels ...and voted for political independence...that's a bad thing? Your viewpoint was defeated 2:1 by the democratic vote . Get over it.
There is something else we want from China, slave labor. Our companies live there now. It keeps wage pressure down here. You either work for less or we'll outsource your job.
Congratulations Brits! You're about to get your nation back.
The Americans have totally sold out to the Chinese - that's a huge amount of tariff concessions they're making in return for the Chinese simply buying stuff they need anyway.
As a matter of fact, the Americans have completely dominated the Chinese government.  Don't buy into nonsense.
it's hardly a matter of fact - the opinion of who has got the most from the deal is always going to be subjective - if you understand the difference between facts and subjective opinion. Trump not going through with the new tariffs and rolling back by 50% the ones already in place just so the Chinese can buy basic commodities that they need anyway seems like a major sell out and an absolutely *****deal that makes Trump look like a chump
pray tell, how does the US government completely dominate the Chinese government, seriously??? please tell me - Trump may not even be POTUS in 11 months time - I can tell you for sure that Xi the Pooh will definitely be in power in five years' time in China. The control he has over his country is vastly superior to the control Trump has over the US - and thank goodness that's the case - although quite frankly, it's scary that Trump seems to be above the US law - and I was under the impression that no person in the State was supposed to be above the law - obviously, if you're black and live in the South, most of your human rights don't actually exist and you can be unarmed but still shot dead by the police and the police will never be examined or punished for such extra judicial assassinations.
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