Back to top

Image: Bigstock

The G20 Meeting Cometh: Global Week Ahead

Read MoreHide Full Article

The weekend’s G20 meeting in Osaka, Japan — starting on Friday and running into Saturday — should be the week’s main event. But it is a closer.

In advance of that, I list Reuters’ five world market themes. These focus investors and trader’s attention in the Global Week Ahead.

Away from the G20 summit, the latest themes talk about weakening consumer inflation, across the globe — tamping down policy and market rate expectations.

I have them in order of importance to equities. Not surprisingly, the G20 is at Number One. Rates are the next four.

Read on.

(1) Here Comes the U.S. President… to a G-19 Summit.

It’s been a pretty tumultuous first-half of the year, and whether things calm down from here hinges on a June 28-29 summit of the G20 world powers, where Presidents Trump and Xi are expected to meet and hopefully resolve their differences on trade and tech.

At stake is a decision on whether Washington slaps import tariffs on another $300 billion of Chinese goods, a scenario that Goldman Sachs says could sink equity markets as much as 4%. It could also tip the balance between economic recovery and recession, as several markets, from shipping to copper, sound alarm bells.

Trump has bones to pick with other G20 leaders, too. He will meet Turkish president Tayyip Erdogan who is risking U.S. sanctions on his country by placing an order for Russian-made S-400 missile defense system. India, Mexico, Canada and Germany have also all at different times incurred Trump’s wrath over trade. Most recently he complained about the “devalued” euro, which he said gave European exporters an unfair edge.

With more and more central banks pivoting towards policy easing, the issue of exchange rates looms large. Fears are that another currency war will further strain ties between nations. Japan says it will voice concern if currency moves elsewhere “deviate from economic fundamentals.” But having just signaled readiness to ramp up stimulus, it too could find itself on the receiving end of Trump’s anger.

Currency and trade wars aside, an actual war might be on the horizon after Trump allegedly ordered a missile strike on Iran, before rescinding it. Recent oil tanker attacks in the Gulf, blamed by Trump on Iran, also will be in focus.

(2) U.S. Consumer Inflation Expectations Head Down. So Do U.S. Rates.

Having struggled for years to meet a 2% inflation target — excluding food and energy costs — the U.S. Federal Reserve might be forgiven for feeling a bit frustrated.

In what went slightly unnoticed amid all the rate-cut focus at the last Fed meeting, policymakers again changed price growth forecasts — downward.

The median projection for year-end core personal consumption expenditures (core PCE, the Fed’s main gauge) was taken down to 1.8% versus 2% in the March forecasts. Headline PCE expectations dropped to 1.5%, the weakest projection since 2016.

May’s core PCE reading, due June 28, is forecast to be steady at 1.6%. But watch for revisions to the April print. The previous reading was on target, but the March level was revised lower, indicating yet more ground lost in the battle to thwart disinflation.

It’s unsurprising, therefore, that eight of 17 Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) members see a lower Fed funds rate by end-2019.

(3) European Inflation Heads Down Too. So Do ECB Rate Expectations.

Inflation week is coming up in the Eurozone, and it will tell whether ECB chief Mario Draghi was right to fire his warning shot that more monetary easing would come unless prices started rising faster.

So far, years of stimulus and record-low rates have failed to work their magic, and inflation has undershot the ECB’s near 2% target since 2013. The rate was 1.2% in May. The bank is worried but it is a dilemma shared by policymakers in many countries, not least the United States and Japan.

German and Spanish inflation data is out Thursday. French numbers on Friday are released just ahead of the “flash” Eurozone reading for June.

But Draghi’s words have made a mark. A closely-tracked key market inflation gauge — the five-year, five-year break even forward — has shot up to 1.3%, having languished at record lows at around 1.12% ahead of Tuesday’s speech.

Economists say “real economy” indicators, wages, for instance, paint a less pessimistic inflation outlook, raising questions about whether Draghi’s reaction to market-based inflation measures is warranted.

One more reason to watch next week’s inflation data closely.

(4) Following the Fed, the ECB and the BOJ — Other Central Banks Could Go Down the Rates Hole, But Not This Week.

Cutting interest rates, or at least flagging rate-cut possibilities, is in vogue at the moment. And as often happens, the path trodden by the Fed, ECB and Bank of Japan is being followed also by emerging markets.

Mexico is reeling from a Fitch ratings downgrade and an outlook cut from Moody’s and is unlikely make any moves until after the Fed.

Central banks in India and Russia have already embarked on policy easing, Indonesia and Philippines have signaled cuts ahead. The spotlight shifts to Mexico, Hungary, Czech Republic and Thailand which have meetings scheduled in coming days.

Markets will be interested in what message is signaled by the Czechs. They have been raising interest rates but some policymakers have hinted there’s no need for further tightening. Hungary meanwhile is expected to put off any rate-tightening plans in response to the ECB’s dovish pivot.

(5) Can Stocks Have a Summer Lull? Please!

It’s been an eventful year so far. Trade tensions have flared and calmed, then flared again. Mexico found itself replacing China as the lightning rod for trade tensions with Washington, only for the focus to shift back to Beijing.

Many central banks have made dramatic dovish pivots, re-igniting market rallies. These were doused every now and then by glum growth data that sent investors piling back into safe-haven and defensive bets, only to venture back into riskier waters. Add to the mix the tensions between Washington and Iran.

But Wall Street, at record highs, may be paying more attention to the Fed.

Clearly, investors are divided on how this will play out: Safe havens gold and government bonds have rewarded investors with roughly 8% returns year-to-date. But higher-risk growth plays did well too; emerging local currency debt, for instance, delivered 8% while the S&P500, Chinese stocks and Brent crude are up 20% on the year. Oil, however, has lost ground in the second quarter, hinting that worries over growth may be starting to gain the upper hand.

So bond markets are flagging a slowdown; equities suggest the opposite.

We may find out in the next half-year which of them got it right.

New Large Cap Additions to Zacks #1 Rank (STRONG BUY) List—

(1) Eisai :
This is a $16.5B market cap Japanese biotech and drug maker.

The Zacks VGM score is C, but there is a B for Growth.

Operations are carried out through the following divisions: Pharmaceuticals: veterinary drugs other food additives, livestock feed and pharmaceutical production systems and equipment.

The Group has overseas consolidated subsidiaries in the U.S., Canada, the U.K., France, Germany, East Southeast Asia and South and Central America.

Shares plunged from $80 to $55 in late March. Must have been a lousy earnings notice, perhaps on a major drug. They appointed a new CFO in early June.

(2) Martin Marietta Materials (MLM - Free Report) : This is a $14.0B market-cap Building Products, concrete and aggregates player.

The Zacks VGM score is C again, with a B for Growth.

The aggregates product line is sold and shipped from a network of more than 270 quarries and distribution facilities in 26 states, Canada, the Bahamas and the Caribbean Islands.

The cement, ready mixed concrete, and asphalt and paving product lines, are located in strategic, vertically integrated markets, predominantly Texas and Colorado.

YTD, these shares are looking beautiful, with a nice steady rise from $180 to $225. But this looks to be very near to the top of the range, going back to 2017.

(3) Columbia Sportswear (COLM - Free Report) : This is a pricy $99 a share apparel maker, with a $6.6B market cap.

The Zacks VGM score is F, with an F for Value and a D for Growth.

As one of the largest outerwear companies in the world and the leading seller of skiwear in the United States, the company has developed an international reputation across an expanding product line for quality, performance, functionality and value.

After ripping to $105 a share in early February on a big earnings beat, the shares have been day-trader shorted down to $95 to $100.

Key Global Macro—

By far, the dominant risk over the coming week derives from the G20 meeting.

But that geopolitical moment runs alongside further developments in the Persian Gulf, and progress toward ratifying the USMCA deal in Congress.

Macro releases look light. However, Asia has a few worth noting:

Chinese industrial profits in May are out on Wednesday. Did the U.S. China trade war hit Mainland China profits? I expect so.

A series of Japanese indicators (retail sales, jobless rate, Tokyo CPI, industrial production and housing starts) hit the tape. This will give risk markets a sense of the weakness in the Japanese economy, the host of the G20 summit.

We get South Korean industrial output and manufacturing as well as non-manufacturing surveys. This is another Asian economy showing weakness, due to the U.S.-China trade war.

On Monday, the German IFO indexes hit the tape. Look for Business Climate to be 97.5 after a 97.9 prior, Current Assessment should go to 100.3 from 100.6, and expectations should go to 94.6 from 95.3.

Want the key point? All three new German IFO readings are headed lower.

On Tuesday, USTR Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Mnuchin will be among the members of the U.S. delegation that will recommence negotiations with China as soon as Tuesday — in Japan.

Fed Chair Powell delivers a full-on economic outlook and monetary policy review on Tuesday. There is indeed going to be considerable related Fed-speak next week, with five regional Fed speakers other than Powell on tap.

The U.S. Case-Shiller Home Price Index data comes out. Look for a +2.5% y/y number for the U.S. cooling slightly, after a prior reading of +2.7% y/y.

The Reserve Bank of New Zealand should keep its cash rate unchanged at 1.5%.

On Wednesday, the Bank of Thailand is expected to remain on hold, leaving its benchmark rate at 1.75%.

On Thursday, Banxico (the Central Bank of Mexico) is expected to remain on hold too. The policy overnight rate should remain unchanged at 8.25%.

U.S. initial jobless claims should stay quite low at 219K.

On Friday, we get the U.S. PCE deflator. This should be low at +1.5% y/y. This is a prime consumer inflation metric you may not know of.

In comparison, the Eurozone CPI estimate should be +1.2%y/y. That is low too.

The University of Chicago PMI looks for a 54.0 print. That is still expansionary.

University of Michigan consumer sentiment is holding up well. Look for a 97.9 print to close out the week.

 

More Stock News: This Is Bigger than the iPhone!

It could become the mother of all technological revolutions. Apple sold a mere 1 billion iPhones in 10 years but a new breakthrough is expected to generate more than 27 billion devices in just 3 years, creating a $1.7 trillion market. 

Zacks has just released a Special Report that spotlights this fast-emerging phenomenon and 6 tickers for taking advantage of it. If you don't buy now, you may kick yourself in 2020. 

Click here for the 6 trades >>


See More Zacks Research for These Tickers


Normally $25 each - click below to receive one report FREE:


Columbia Sportswear Company (COLM) - free report >>

Martin Marietta Materials, Inc. (MLM) - free report >>

Published in