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Top 5 Things to Know in the Market on Friday

Published 10/18/2019, 06:13 AM
Updated 10/18/2019, 06:19 AM
© Reuters.

Investing.com -- China's economy grew at its slowest rate in nearly 30 years in the third quarter, and Boris Johnson is battling to get his Brexit deal through a recalcitrant House of Commons, while Saudi Arabia has postponed the IPO of national company Saudi Aramco - again. Here's what you need to know in financial markets on Friday, 18th October.

1. China grows more slowly than expected

The Chinese economy grew at its slowest rate in nearly 30 years in the third quarter, as a trade dispute with the U.S. took an increasingly heavy toll.

Gross domestic product grew at an annual rate of 6.0% in the three months through September, down from 6.2% in the second quarter and below the 6.1% expected by analysts ahead of time.

The news contrasts intriguingly with this week’s news flow which has concentrated on China trying to extract more concessions from the U.S. before it signs the “phase-1” handshake deal agreed last week by the two sides. Evidence of strain on the Chinese economy is likely to encourage trade hawks in the U.S. administration to hold out for more important concessions from Beijing than those offered so far.

2. Stocks flat; Coke, Amex, and AMD reports awaited

U.S. stocks were set to open flat, consolidating gains made on the back of largely decent earnings reports and progress in the Brexit saga (on which, more below).

By 6:15 AM ET, Dow futures were down 5 points, effectively unchanged from Thursday's close, while S&P 500 Futures and the Nasdaq 100 futures contract had also moved less than 0.1%.

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Heading today’s roll of earnings are Coca-Cola, where focus is likely to fall on what management says about the outlook for Coke’s first energy drink, which is due to be launched in January. American Express, Schlumberger and Synchrony Financial(NYSE:SYF) are likewise both due to report before the bell, while Advanced Micro Devices is also due to update later.

3. Johnson battles to pass Brexit bill

After a dramatic breakthrough in Brussels on Thursday, U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson now has to get his EU withdrawal bill through a House of Commons which voted three times against his predecessor’s version (to which it bears more than a passing resemblance). A vote is scheduled for an extraordinary session on Saturday.

The pound has risen in European trading amid reports that a larger-than-expected number of Labour Party lawmakers are willing to back the agreement, fearing a backlash from constituents who voted, on balance, to leave the EU in 2016 and whose patience/attention span with regard to Brexit was exhausted some time ago.

However, Johnson does not have a majority in the House of Commons, and even if the bill passes, opponents of Brexit will still have a chance to force a referendum when the government brings legislation to implement the withdrawal agreement.

4. Emerging markets rally on five-day ceasefire in Syria

Turkish and Russian assets rallied after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan agreed to a five-day ceasefire in northern Syria, under pressure from the U.S.

Turkey’s armed forces have been attacking Kurdish fighters across a front hundreds of miles wide, but they have run into resistance led by forces from the Syrian regime and their Russian allies.

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The ceasefire removes one immediate threat of escalation that could harm either of Europe’s largest two emerging markets. The lira rose 0.7% against the dollar but came off intraday highs on reports of pockets of continued fighting. The ruble rose to within touching distance of a three-month high, despite the continued weakness in oil prices that usually determines the exchange rate.

5. Saudi Aramco postpones IPO again

Of course it was too good to be true. Saudi Arabia has once again postponed the initial public offering of national oil company Saudi Aramco, after bankers failed to guarantee the $2 trillion valuation that the kingdom’s de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has insisted on.

Reports suggest that the first part of the IPO, which is slated for the domestic Saudi market only, will be put off at least until January.

By then, Saudi Arabia, OPEC and Russia may have had time to take more action to push crude oil prices back up closer to where they want them. Speculation is growing that the so-called OPEC+ group will be forced after all into announcing additional supply cuts when it reviews its existing arrangements in December.

Crude prices have fallen this week on fears of global oversupply, illustrated in a massive build in U.S. inventories last week. The sell-off on the back of those data mean that there were only moderate further losses after the China GDP number, and by 6:15 AM U.S. crude futures were up 0.7% on the day at $54.31, while Brent was up 0.3% at $60.08.

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Latest comments

you guys while gdp was down 0.2% industrial outputs are up 1.4% so thats hardly a reason for them to make a deal. Sounds like the media grabbing at straws.
Chinese numbers are cooked. Their global investments are down by 77%.
you must be really uneducated. lmao. China is an export country, us deficit with China is running much higher this year than last year. if their # is fake by 77% then you're implying US GDP is off by 77% as well.
#Otb Investor you are sleeping I think, if China down 77% global recession already
As David Wong said, China is Lion. when lion roar, the world will shaking
It's interesting that a country with 2% GDP growth would think a 6.2% to 6% down is meaningfully bad.
I know kind of funny and China is not emerging market and it is second biggest economies.
without currency manipulation China would hardly be at 0.2% GDP. relativity doesn't like to work properly when two things are completely different. an apple and orange are relatively the same thing, yet they are almost completely different. go ahead and weight the two then tell me which one is better.
another uneducated fool, it is proven that china has been trying to appreciate its currency for over a decade, even wto acknowledge china is not manipulating its currency, only one think so is all the ppl under trump administration and his mindless base. the reason why CNY is following is the tariff. it is because US is winning the trade war so far thus usd is stronger, you can't have it both ways. unless you're admitting China has the upper hand all along.
The strategy of US is working on china. US is choking Chinese USD liquidity. If they announced it is 6.0 point, the reality would be undee 6.0. They have tendency of numeral manipulation because of the feature of thebCommunists party........Fast total surrender of Chinese government is real good thing for US, so I thing US should choke them more harsh way. [Harsh choking] can make fast surrender.....If trump want good result of election, Choke them more harsh until upper part of 2020. They would surrender before president election.
lol then vietnam have over 7.5 percent GDP growth, Is that more great than Chinese growth?? level is totally different.
i'm vietnamese. I hereby to confirm that its Gdp was aggressively cooked lol
I think chineses are really afraid of truth or they don't know the truth. And I heard that recently many world manufacturing function is moving to vietnam. Belive great future growth of vietnam
I hope they are getting the message and start getting real about making a deal.
I will be very straight forward. I do not believe in their data. Perhaps it may be closer to 1 to 2%
Well if they can play with their data willy nilly then why release an ugly 6 instead of 7 or 8%
 . . Good question. Probably because the world knows that global economy is slowing, a number too high may arouse suspicion while a number too low will cause panic in the market.
I will be very straight forward. I do not believe in their data. Perhaps it may be closer to 7 to 8%
Oh boohoo 6 percent. People in other countries would be dancing in the streets with a number like that :0
all about the expectation
global problems this china:(
You’re tellin’ me...
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