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Trump Recovery, Services PMI, Stimulus Hopes - What's up in Markets on Monday

Published 10/05/2020, 06:14 AM
Updated 10/05/2020, 06:16 AM
©  Reuters

By Peter Nurse  

Investing.com -- President Trump could leave hospital as soon as later Monday, while his infection has given stimulus talks fresh impetus while the Covid-19 pandemic continues to batter the globe. Stocks are set to push higher, while oil prices are rebounding from a three-week low. The September ISM services PMI release is also due. Here's what you need to know in financial markets on Monday, October 5th.

1. Trump shows signs of recovery

President Donald Trump could leave the military hospital where he is being treated for Covid-19 as soon as Monday, according to his doctors on Sunday, suggesting he was making a quick recovery from the virus.

That said, there have been questions over the president being prescribed dexamethasone - a generic steroid typically used in grave cases - which could suggest that his case may be more severe than is being suggested.

President Trump has released a series of videos in an effort to reassure the public, and on Sunday took part in a motorcade to acknowledge his supporters who had gathered near the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center just outside Washington.

While a return to the White House would suggest that the election goes ahead as planned, President Trump faces a tough battle to be reelected. A Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Sunday showed him trailing Democrat Joe Biden by 10 percentage points with the election less than a month away.  

2. Stocks bounce as stimulus confidence rises

U.S. stock futures pushed higher, rebounding after Friday’s losses, as a lot of the political uncertainty stemming from President Trump’s Covid news dissipated.

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By 6:20 AM ET, Dow futures were up 135 points or 0.5%, while S&P 500 futures were up 0.5% and Nasdaq futures were 0.9% higher.

Helping the tone was increased confidence that a new stimulus package could be agreed on Capitol Hill. 

House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi expressed optimism over the weekend that a bipartisan stimulus bill could be passed, suggesting Trump’s infection “kind of changes the dynamic.” 

The president added to the pressure from his hospital bed, tweeting his wish for an agreement on a stimulus package, while the disappointing jobs report on Friday surely has focused minds.

Stocks likely to be in focus Monday include the tech giants that have surged during the pandemic, with the Wall Street Journal reporting that they could be particularly hard hit by tax changes in the wake of a Democratic election victory in November.

The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite index bore the brunt of the selling on Friday following President Trump’s Covid news. This index closed 2.2% lower, compared with the 1% loss on the broader S&P 500 index.

3. Coronavirus cases continue to surge

The number of Covid-19 cases now totals over 35 million world wide, according to data from Johns Hopkins University, with many countries in the world now suffering from a second wave of infections.

In the U.S., nine states have reported record increases in cases over the last seven days, mostly in the upper Midwest and West where chilly weather is forcing more activities indoors. New York City’s mayor, Bill de Blasio, has also stated that he’ll close businesses and schools from Wednesday in nine neighborhoods in Brooklyn and Queens where there’s been a surge in coronavirus infections.

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In Europe, Paris will shut all bars completely from Tuesday after a sustained period of high infection rates in France;  the Italian government will likely impose new restrictions in the coming weeks; while the U.K. reported a record number of cases on Sunday after a technical glitch meant that over 15,000 test results had not been transferred into computer systems on time.

4. U.S. services PMI set to show slowing expansion

The key U.S. economic release Monday will be the Institute of Supply Management Services PMI report, an indicator of the overall economic condition for the dominant non-manufacturing sector. This comes after the economy added only 661,000 new nonfarm jobs through the middle of September, less than half of what it created in the month through mid-August. 

Analysts expect the ISM services PMI to come in at 56.3, still above the 50 level which separates expansion from contraction, but below the 56.9 level seen the previous month. The release is due at 10 AM ET (1400 GMT).

News from Europe was disappointing, with the euro zone’s services PMI slumping to 48.0 from August's 50.5. The reimposition of some restrictions to halt a resurgence in the coronavirus sent the bloc's dominant service sector into reverse.

The U.K.’s services PMI dropped to 56.1 in September from August's five-year high of 58.8, a smaller decline than expected by the initial estimate of 55.1. Japan’s services PMI came in at 46.9, contracting for the eight straight month in September but at the slowest pace since the coronavirus pandemic started.

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5. Oil rebounds but increased supply weighs

Crude oil prices have recovered Monday, after falling to their lowest in nearly three weeks late last week, helped by renewed confidence surrounding the potential for a new stimulus package.

A lot of the focus surrounding the energy markets has been on the demand side, understandably given the ongoing impact of the Covid-19 pandemic. However, the supply side of the equation may soon start increasing in importance. 

Libya has seen a near three-fold rise in its output, hitting 270,000 barrels per day last week, still some way off the more than one million barrels per day it was producing at the start of the year. Similarly, the latest data from Baker Hughes showed that the U.S. oil rig count increased by six to 189 over the last week, the highest count since June.

This could increase the pressure on OPEC and its allies to consider further supply cuts at their November meeting.

By 6:20 AM ET, U.S. crude futures were up 4% at $38.52 a barrel, while Brent futures were up 3.6% at $40.67 a barrel. Both benchmarks dropped over 4% on Friday.

Latest comments

if trump sick few more times SP will see 4000 easy ?
***the usd can make all go higher and higher,. they don't care hyperinflation would make people live in ***
but guys! We never talk about CHINA here ,,, Am I wrong or was it all born from them? and Nobody talks about the mess they have combined in the whole world both in terms of health and economics ,,,,, So let's not fool ourselves, I have never seen for 100 years a Natural Virus make these Massacres and continue to do them ... Until al Vaccino, Poor China (Communist and Dictatorial), however, is strangely Healed ,,, and has taken Economics ,, mah ,, Randomness ....., PS Excuse me, but Ebola why didn't it come to Europe, America, China? ?? .. yet it was a virus as terrible as the Covid 19 ,,, Whatever the case the Chinese had already tried with SARS. but it did not go well, Now they have fixed the shot, and this time after numerous attempts they have hit the center in the heart of the world economy,
you are wrong. Chinese government had nothing to do with covid or any of the other nonsense you waffle about.
Ebola is less infective and more mortal. There is an interesting documentary on Neflix titled "Pandemia Globale" (Italian version), which explains what are the characteristics that a virus shall have to become a global pandemia. I.e. Not very letal, but very infective, and long lag for the first comparison on symptoms. In short, if you get a very aggressive virus that would destroy you in one or two days, you won't have energy to go around spreading it for days. You will stay apart from the comunity because just too sick. And, as in China they are many and "markets with live animals", that's statistically the most probable place for an animal to human trasmission (zoonosis).
The fact that we need more stimulus when interest rates are at zero just to keep us afloat tells you all you need to know. This is the end game.
I don't see a stimulus getting passed before the election. Dems know they have Trump and Senate on the ropes. They don't want the stimulus flooding the market and banks. Because trump thinks the stock market resembles the economy. They want the senate to look bad by showing them only focused on Supreme Court seat. In the game of politics the people are the ones that loose!
Bank Earnings Next Week. We will see how bad these loans are getting that are in forbearance. I believe these will continue to get worse for the next 4-6 quarters.
This is going to make 2008 MBS look like a drunken one night stand. The banks are giving out loans with zero capital reserve requirement and zero percent interest. IE: NONE OF THIS IS REAL
Broader based on its exposure to and effect on the overall economy rather than the total number of issues composing the index.
Trump did not write a single tweet for almost 24 hours and we dont have any update for more then date from his doctor. Something must not doing so right.
Wow, he recovery so fast!
B/c it's a political stunt. Sympathy vote, cover for botched debate and future debate.
sure and you have a bunch of evidence ☺️
You never know dude
I'm a little bit confused. "The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite index bore the brunt of the selling on Friday following President Trump’s Covid news. This index closed 2.2% lower, compared with the 1% loss on the broader S&P 500 index."  The s&p has 500 stocks, the Nasdaq has 3,300
great Article as always by the way.
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