Morning Mail:27-02-2025 | ||
In focus today
Economic and market newsWhat happened yesterdayIn the US, mixed signals came from the White House, as President Trump reportedly opened the door for postponing the tariffs on imports from Mexico and Canada, stressing they could take effect on 2 April. Conversely, a White House official stated that Trump’s initial 4 March deadline remained in effect. Simultaneously, Trump also threatened to impose 25% tariffs on EU goods – “that will be on cars and all other things”. All in all, the ambiguous tariff signals could suggest that Trump is using them as a negotiation tool, also underscored by a modest market reaction to the remarks. Hence, tariff uncertainty remains. In geopolitics, President Zelenskyy was on the wire, emphasizing that the success of the minerals deal with the US hinges on this upcoming talks with President Trump. At the same time, Zelenskyy reiterated statements from his deputy prime minister and justice minister, noting that the agreement is part of broader deals with the US, while it could also be included in future security guarantees. Trump confirmed that Zelenskyy will travel to the US on Friday to sign the deal but indicated that the US would not provide any far-reaching security guarantees, saying that Europe should take on that responsibility. We are hosting a webinar today at 09:30-10:00, guiding you through the status and what to expect in terms of possible outcomes and the channels of economic impact. In the euro area, the EU commission presented its “Clean Industrial Deal” comprising its business plan for reviewing economic growth and achieving decarbonisation by unlocking investments in clean industries. The deal aims to boost demand for made-in-Europe products, making energy more affordable, securing access to raw materials, and sharply cut the number of SME companies affected by reporting requirements. We do not expect to a short-term impact on growth from the deal, since there is no significant increase in public spending as part of the plan. The Commission aims at mobilising EUR 100bn (which is merely 0.6% of EU GDP) for EU clean manufacturing in “short-term relief”, but is unclear where the money should come from, and it will mostly likely be mainly private capital as the EU faces financing constraints. All in all, any effect of the deal is years out in the future, but it will likely be positive. Equities: The rotation into Europe continued Wednesday. S&P 500 closed unchanged while Stoxx 600 gained a full 1%. Despite new tariff threats, US markets stopped the bleeding following four-straight declines, with most indices modestly higher. Another sign that investors have recovered was renewed cyclical preference in the sector space. Cyclicals beat defensives by a full 1% globally. This was led by tech consumer discretionary and banks. The Nvidia earnings report helped pushing back AI capex bubble concerns, after crushing earnings expectations and upbeat commentary. US futures are a notch higher this morning. FI: Another trading session with a mild bid for European duration, amid concerns about the (particularly) US growth outlook. Since late last week with disappointing US macro data, 10y UST has declined more than 30bp to 4.25%. At the same time, 10y Bunds have declined “only” 10bp, thereby narrowing the transatlantic spread to 181bp. Last night it was reported that the potential US tariff hikes have been postponed to early April. On the data front, we get Spanish inflation releases today for February. |
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