Financial market review for march 26 2018 afghanistan

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Financial Market Review for March 26, 2018 U.S. stock futures led global shares higher on Monday after reports that the United States and China have quietly started negotiations to improve the U.S. access to Chinese markets eased fears of a trade war between the two economic giants. E-Mini futures ESc1 for the S&P 500. SPX leaped more than 1 percent while Japan's Nikkei .N225 erased earlier losses of 1.3 percent to end 0.7 percent higher. MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan. MIAPJ0000PUS was up 0.4 percent, flipping back to positive territory from a 0.5 percent fall. European shares ticked up on opening, with Germany's Dax .GDAXI, France's Cac. FCHI and Britain's FTSE. FTSE all about 0.3 percent higher. The Wall Street Journal reported U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer listed steps that Washington wants China to take in a letter to Liu He, a newly appointed vice premier who oversees China’s economy. Signs of talk between the two economic giants allayed fear of an escalating trade war, sparked after U.S. President Donald Trump moved to slap tariffs on Chinese goods, on top of import duties on steel and aluminum, prompting a defiant response from Beijing. Economic data released through the Asian session this morning was limited to New Zealand’s February trade figures. Year-on-year, the trade deficit narrowed from a revised NZ$3,280m to NZ$3,020m, narrowing greater than to a forecasted NZ$3,225m deficit, while month-on-month, January’s revised NZ$655m deficit bounced to a NZ$217m surplus in February. The Kiwi Dollar moved from $0.72397 to $0.72328 upon release of the figures before making gains later in the morning, up 0.50% to $0.7269 at the time of writing, supported by the upbeat trade figures. Elsewhere the Aussie Dollar was up 0.31% to $0.7723, supported by last week’s pickup in commodity and oil prices and a pullback in U.S Treasury yields, while the Japanese Yen lost some ground, down 0.14% to ¥104.89 through the morning session. With economic data on the lighter side, the markets will be in the hands of Trump and China, with any more tariffs and more material retaliations by China likely to drive risk aversion to new levels. For the EUR, economic data scheduled for release this morning is limited to finalized 4th quarter GDP figures out of France that is forecasted to be in line with 2nd prelim figures. Barring a deviation from prelim numbers, the stats are unlikely to have a material impact on the EUR, with market risk sentiment through the day likely to be of greater influence. There will have been some relief last week that the EU was able to garner an exemption from the steel and aluminum tariffs. For the week ahead, any more talk of tariffs on EU car exports to the U.S would be the one to watch, together with any more retaliatory moves by China.

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