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Trump Nixes Stimulus, VPs Debate, Big Tech Damned - What's up in Markets

Published 10/07/2020, 06:31 AM
Updated 10/07/2020, 06:35 AM
© Reuters

By Geoffrey Smith 

Investing.com -- President Donald Trump calls off the stimulus talks, the House of Representatives damns Big Tech for abusing their market dominance, and stocks are only bouncing weekly from Monday's slide. Here's what you need to know in financial markets on Wednesday, October 7th.

1. Trump nixes stimulus talks

President Donald Trump abruptly called off talks with House Democrats on a fresh stimulus package, saying that the Democrats’ demands included too much money for what he called badly run state and city governments.

Trump promised a fresh stimulus package after the November elections. His ability to deliver that, however, will depend on the Republicans regaining control of the House of Representatives, which neither opinion polls nor prediction markets expect.

Trump’s move came on the same day that Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell made what analysts said was his strongest plea yet for more support for the economy from fiscal policy.

Vice-presidential candidates Mike Pence and Kamala Harris will hold their only debate after the market close.

2. House damns Big Tech monopolies

A House of Representatives report concluded that the big technology companies who dominate the Internet with their consumer-facing platforms have all abused their market power, and recommended that they be forced into a radical restructuring of their businesses.

House Republicans said they didn’t share the report’s conclusions but repeated their criticism of the companies’ perceived bias against conservative views.

The report could be a foretaste of a much tougher line against the likes of Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) and Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) after the elections, especially if the White House and Senate also swing to the Democratic Party. It comes at a time when smaller companies appear increasingly emboldened to sue Big Tech for anti-competitive behavior, most notably in Fortnite owner Epic’s action against what it perceives as price-gouging through its App store.

3. Stocks set to bounce weakly

U.S. stock markets are set to open with a bounce after the sharp reversal that followed Trump’s announcement late in the session on Monday.

By 6:15 AM ET, Dow 30 futures were up 170 points, or 0.6%, recouping just under half of Monday’s losses. The S&P 500 Futures contract was up 0.5% and NASDAQ Futures, which underperformed on Monday, were continuing that underperformance so far with a gain of only 0.4%.

Aside from the Big Tech stocks, companies likely to be in focus on Wednesday include the airlines, for whom President Trump is still trying to carve out $25 billion in additional aid, in a bid to forestall over 30,000 job cuts announced in recent weeks by the struggling companies.

There’ll also be interest in Boeing (NYSE:BA), after it cut its forecasts for global jet demand by 11%, and in General Electric (NYSE:GE), after the company landed in trouble with securities regulators for accounting practises at its insurance unit.

4. Europe's shaky recovery

Europe’s economic recovery totters on, a day after being called ‘shaky’ by European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde. Lagarde's comments were interpreted as readying the market for fresh stimulus from the ECB at its December meeting.

German industrial production, the heart of the Eurozone economy, surprisingly fell 0.2% in August, defying hopes for a 1.5% increase. The numbers are best viewed together with factory orders data, which exceeded expectations on Monday.  Spain’s industrial production drop eased, meanwhile.

There was more unambiguously good news from Italy, where retail sales crept into positive territory in year-on-year terms with an 8% increase in August.

U.K. house prices, meanwhile, rose at their fastest pace since 2016 in September, according to mortgage lender Halifax.

5. Crude falls again on Trump, API; EIA stockpiles eyed

Crude oil prices fell back below $40 a barrel in response to a double-whammy from the American Petroleum Institute and President Trump. U.S. crude futures were down 2.7% at $39.58 a barrel, while Brent futures were down 2.3% at $41.68 a barrel.

The API’s inventory data for last week rose by just under 1 million barrels, in contrast to expectations of a drop of some 600,000 barrels. The Energy Information Administration’s data are due as usual at 10:30 AM ET.

Trump’s comments, meanwhile, knocked hopes for a sustained recovery in U.S. fuel demand, especially since they came more or less immediately after Powell’s pleas for help. The lack of a stimulus package is likely to feed through directly into lower demand for jet fuel, gasoline and diesel.

Latest comments

Trump is holding more stimulus hostage to his reelection.  Not a fan of free money for no work but also no fan of trickery and deception.  Hope people see thru this!
SIX TRILLION dollar deficit.....that is FIVE times the last time Republicans screwed things up it took Obama 8 years to bring it down to 500 billion now trump jacked it up by a factor of 12 putting us 30 trillion in debt....trump added 10 trillion in just one term...Obama only added 8 in 2 entire terms and nothing to show for it except the super billionaires got richer and got all the money  trickle-down is a huge scam and has been going on since Reagan and will be the downfall of the USA and the dollar......wake up now AMERICA or you will lose everything
With that said... If republicans keep control you will need to consider changing your name to Ben. ;-)
The do nothing Dems got called out. They are wasting everyone's time and kicking them while they're down. NO for Joe 🚷.
The "do nothing Democrats" weren't in control.
Donnies ego is too imbalanced for an average prez to be good for America. We had hoped that as a billionaire he was mature enough despite his lack of political experience, but he was all Mister FAKE in persona. And he created the 'fake news' phrase and HE TURNS OUT TO BE that very thing. Wow, what guts to fail so badly without foretelling the failure. -- He def needs to manipulate the market to quickly make $300M for his upcoming personal debt call. -- SEC, are you sharpening your pencil and remain awake?
Market up for no reason and comment section filled with 5 year olds arguing about which elite billionaire club needs to be in power. This is the world we live in now
not no reason bro read trumps tweets last night skinny bills coming! use the same part of ur brain thats wrong to figure out why! bless
Yes, up for NO reason because there will be no skinny bills. Why would the House neuter itself by giving Trump talking points three weeks before the election while simultaneously allowing Republicans to dig their heels in for any future benefits?
as usual, the dems are only thinking about giving more money to their friends. they don't give a *****about us sheep...
seems usd are getting weak again
Do you know what's in the stimulus proposal from the Democrats? Not good for big tech! Trump did good.
Trump fail to the market. I don't think he has any advantage to people except market.
Wall Street BreakfastWall Street Breakfast: Trump Eases Off His Stimulus Talks ShutdownOct. 07, 2020 6:35 AM ETAAPL, AMZN, CMCSA...3 CommentsListen on the go! A daily podcast of Wall Street Breakfast will be available by 8:00 a.m. on Seeking Alpha, iTunes, Stitcher and Spotify.Trump eases off his stimulus talks shutdownPresident Donald Trump continues to take the markets on a wild ride, this time boosting U.S. stock index futures, saying he would still support specific forms of fiscal stimulus after calling an end to negotiations yesterday. Trump tweeted yesterday afternoon that another COVID relief bill would only go through after the election, sending stocks tumbling. Trump said a sticking point on aid for state and local governments amounted to a bailout of blue states. But he later tweeted support for a standalone bill for $1,200 stimulus checks, $25B in relief for airlines and paycheck protection program funds. Futures climbed steadily overnight. S&P futures
Big tech are worst than the nazis
K1ll B1ll
Political move and Pelosi is also playing politics these 2 parties will completey destroy USA mark my words
"Big tech are worst than the nazis"  - I think 6 millions jews (and 5 millions poles and 20 million russians) may disagree with you....
Alot of market manipulation these days.
now market not stable
Wow. Looks like another fun day! Bought some yesterday on the dip, and think today... well... just gonna sit this one out!
i did the opposite .. cashed in some gains but cursing myself for not sitting this dip out for only half. But imo the selloff into nov3 + a week should start right after the stim, with a gap n ******** bearish engulfing .. buy the rumor ..
now market not stable
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