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President Donald Trump |
This has
encouraged uncertainty to emerge over the conviction from the U.S.
administration over the trade truce and whether a resolution to this
long-standing issue will be found. Confusion and uncertainty over what is
happening coupled with renewed concerns about the likelihood of slowing global
growth has switched the market sentiment creating a poor mood for stocks.
Investors are becoming increasingly doubtful over Washington and Beijing
securing a deal within the 90-day window, given the sheer lack of detail and
conflicting accounts over what both sides actually agreed on.
The tremors
created from President Trump’s Twitter outbursts continue to illustrate how
financial markets remain extremely sensitive to trade-related newsflow. With
Trump warning China via Twitter and stating that America is going to have a
“real deal” or “no deal at all” just days after talks, one can’t help but feel
a sense of déjà vu that Trump is going to return to his public hard-line
stance. Although the Trump Administration has repeatedly blamed the Federal
Reserve’s monetary policy tightening for the unfavourable investor mood in
stocks, the key culprit behind the selloff witnessed yesterday was clearly the
comment made by Trump on trade with China.
Market players
who were cautiously optimistic over trade tensions easing are losing patience
and this continues to be reflected across global equity markets. Asia closed
mostly lower this morning following steep losses on Wall Street overnight. The
negative sentiment from Asia has already infected European markets and is seen
trickling back down to Wall Street this afternoon.
Sterling braces for another rough
session
Investors with
an interest in the Pound should securely fasten their seatbelts and safety
helmets for a volatile ride ahead of the Parliamentary vote on Brexit next
week.
The British
Pound was an easy target for sellers yesterday after Theresa May’s government
was found in contempt of Parliament for refusing to release key Brexit papers.
May’s triple defeats in Parliament are highly discouraging and may intensify
fears over her Brexit deal being rejected next week. With every day in the
political arena shaping up to be a terrible day for Theresa May, this is poised
to weigh heavily on the British Pound.
In regards to
the technical picture, the GBPUSD fulfils the prerequisites of a bearish trend
on the weekly charts as there have been consistently lower lows and lower
highs. A solid breakdown and weekly close under 1.2700 should instil bears with
enough inspiration to target 1.2590.
Will the OPEC meeting push oil prices
higher?
The past few
trading weeks have been quite rough for Oil prices amid supply and demand side
factors. With Oil finding comfort at such depressed levels, expectations remain
elevated over OPEC+ cutting production by roughly over one million barrels per
day in an effort to stabilize markets. While a production cut from OPEC+ is
seen pushing Oil prices higher in the near term, the medium- to long-term
impact remains open to question. Rising production from U.S. Shale, lingering
fears of global oversupply and threat of slowing growth hitting demand remain
core themes that will continue weighing on Oil markets.
The near-term
outlook for WTI Oil will depend on the outcome of tomorrows OPEC meeting. A
production cut in line with market expectations is seen pushing WTI Oil back
towards $55. Alternatively, if OPEC decides to leave production unchanged,
prices are seen sinking back towards $50 as investors exploit oversupply fears
to attack.
Have you heard this? Many Nigerian exporters have been defrauded of huge amount of money in the process of exporting commodities to foreign countries. Do you know why? They were not trained on export operations, management, documentations and the best methods of payment in export trade. This is terrible!!! Nigerians cannot continue to lose money to foreigners in the course of export business. Exporters, why don’t you get a practical manual that teaches the stages of export trade from processing and packaging of commodities to receipt of payment by the foreign buyers. It teaches export operations, export management, export documentations and methods of payment in export trade? It is a contemporary step-by-step guide to export trade. It tells all the contemporary dynamics in export trade. To get it, click on the link below:
http://www.tectono-business.com/2016/02/contemporary-step-by-step-guide-to.html
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