
Morning Bid: U.S. Trade fears ebb, Canada's Carney returns
LONDON, April 29 (Reuters) - What matters in U.S. and global markets today
By Mike Dolan, opens new tab, Editor-At-Large, Financial Industry and Financial Markets
A calmer mood has pervaded world markets this week, as a torrent of upcoming U.S. economic health reports and corporate updates are corralling stocks and hopes are rising for trade war de-escalation.
But anxieties remain about volatile policymaking in Washington. In today's column, I look at the action the Trump administration could take that could truly create a dollar shock.
Now onto the market news.
Today's Market Minute
* Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney's Liberals retained power in the country's election on Monday. "Our old relationship with the United States, a relationship based on steadily increasing integration, is over," Carney said in a victory speech in Ottawa.
* President Donald Trump's administration will seek to reduce the impact of his automotive tariffs by alleviating some duties imposed on foreign parts in domestically manufactured cars, officials said.
* BP on Tuesday reported a deeper-than-expected 48% drop in net profit to $1.4 billion on weaker refining and gas trading and announced the departure of its strategy chief as it tries to shore up investor confidence.
* HSBC warned that loan demand and credit quality could suffer from the broader fallout of U.S. President Donald Trump's global trade war, signalling tougher times for trade-focused banks even as the lender's first quarter profit beat forecasts.
* Some third-party Amazon merchants who previously sold China-made goods during the online retailer's premier July shopping event are sitting it out this year or reducing the amount of discounted merchandise they offer.
Trade fears ebb, Canada's Carney returns
As Wall Street awaits numbers on GDP, inflation, jobs and megacap earnings, the latest twists in the tariff standoff have been in a positive direction. Washington appears to be rowing back some of the tensions, and there is now the prospect of at least some bilateral deals emerging over the coming week.
President Donald Trump's administration will move to reduce the impact of his automotive tariffs on Tuesday, according to officials, by ensuring car companies paying tariffs will not be charged other levies, such as those on steel and aluminum.
Meanwhile, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said many top trading partners of the United States had made "very good" proposals to avert U.S. tariffs. He also noted that one of the first deals to be signed would likely be with India this week or next.
These slightly more positive soundings were enough to turn around intraday losses for the main U.S. stock indexes on Monday, and the S&P 500 (.SPX), opens new tab ended flat, with futures a touch higher before Tuesday's bell.
North of the border, one clear political implication of Trump's trade and diplomatic policies also unfolded overnight.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney was set to return as the country's leader as his Liberal Party, miles behind in opinion polls as recently as January, looks set to be the biggest party after Monday's election, albeit just shy of an overall majority.
The Canadian dollar , which has appreciated more than 3% against the greenback this month and almost 4% for the year so far, held firm as the results streamed in.
Back on Wall Street, there was a heavy diary slated for Tuesday, including April consumer confidence readouts and March trade data. March job openings numbers also kick off the week's big labor market tallies.
U.S. Treasuries rallied on Monday in advance, with a dour manufacturing survey from the Dallas Federal Reserve for April acting as a tailwind by nudging up bets for Fed rate cuts a tad.
Staying with Treasuries, 2- and 10-year yields hit their lowest in more than three weeks on Monday, although they backed up a bit today. The dollar (.DXY), opens new tab - seemingly hurt whether Treasury yields go up or down these days - ebbed again, most obviously against China's yuan .
Sterling also hit a more than three-year high against the dollar on Monday, with positive momentum behind UK stocks (.FTMC), opens new tab, (.FTSE), opens new tab building and the Bank of England dragging its feet on interest rate cuts. It has ticked back only marginally today.
The rally in Treasuries came despite what appeared to be worrying U.S. government borrowing projections. The Treasury said on Monday it expects to borrow $514 billion in the second quarter, $391 billion higher than its February estimate, mainly due to a lower cash balance at the beginning of the quarter and projected lower net cash flows.
These figures likely do not include any revenues from tariffs, though these are still highly uncertain, and markets assume the Treasury will leave most of its auction sizes unchanged for the fifth straight quarter when it announces its refunding plans on Wednesday.
In Europe, most of the market attention �t;�ࢀt;STOXX�ࢀt; was on the earnings season there.
Shares of HSBC (HSBA.L), opens new tab rose 2.5% after the London-based lender launched a $3 billion share buyback, while Deutsche Bank (DBKGn.DE), opens new tab advanced almost 3% after Germany's largest lender posted a 39% rise in first-quarter profit.
BP BP.L was a darker story, with its shares down 3.5% after the oil giant reported a deeper-than-expected 48% drop in net profit to $1.4 billion on weaker refining and gas trading.
Finally, make sure to check out my column today, where I turn to the U.S. and consider what could happen if the Trump administration were to take the previously unthinkable step of leaving the IMF.
Chart of the day
Surprise, surprise! Economic "surprise" indexes that measure incoming economic data relative to consensus forecasts show that U.S. gauges are marginally back in positive territory for the first time since mid-February. The rebound in the index likely says as much about the extent to which forecasts have been slashed due to tariff-related uncertainties as it does about any upturn in activity per se.
But financial markets price expectations, so the fact that expectations are no longer being undercut by the actual numbers has helped calm the horses, at least for now.
Today's events to watch
* US April consumer confidence, March international goods trade balance, March retail/wholesale inventories, March JOLTS hob openings data, February house prices, Dallas Federal Reserve April service sector survey
* Canada election results stream in
* European Central Bank conference on spillovers from monetary policy, with ECB board member Piero Cipollone and ECB supervisor Sharon Donnery; Bank of England Deputy Governor Dave Ramsden speaks
* EU Trade Commissioner Maros Sefcovic meets UK Foreign Minister David Lammy and Trade Secretary Jonathan Reynolds in London
* U.S. corporate earnings: Pfizer, Corning, Regeneron, Visa, Starbucks, UPS, Coca-Cola, Edison, Kraft Heinz, General Motors, Honeywell, PPG, Ecolab, S&PGlobal First Solar, Hilton Worldwide, Paccar, Seagate, Sysco, Co-Star, Sherwin Williams, American Tower, AO Smith, Altria, Booking, Caesars Entertainment, Regency Centers, Royal Caribbean, Incyte, XYlem, Zebra, Veralto, Essex Property, Entergy, Expand, Mondelez, ONEOK
Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, opens new tab, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.
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Michael Fanone, a former D.C. police officer who was attacked by Rodriguez on Jan. 6, took issue with Trump's posture in California. Fanone called the president 'a hypocrite,' and 'a liar.' 'Had those people storming the Capitol been illegal f--- immigrants or Black people or any other group that … his base found to be displeasing, then they would have said 'open fire,'' Fanone said in an interview. The Los Angeles clashes began Friday as federal immigration agents attempted to carry out arrests in the city. Some protesters tried to stop vehicles carrying detained immigrants and the confrontations soon turned violent, with officers using pepper spray and batons. By Sunday, National Guard troops, outfitted with heavy military equipment, moved into downtown Los Angeles. Some demonstrators pelted law enforcement vehicles with rocks and debris, and set numerous vehicles on fire. Dozens of people were arrested over the weekend, and the L.A. Police Department reported five officers suffering minor injuries and two others treated and released from the hospital in recent days. By Monday, Trump had deployed the U.S. Marines into the state. At a news conference on Tuesday, Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Rep. Jimmy Gomez, D-Calif., both brought up comparisons to Jan. 6. 'We begged the President of the United States to send in the National Guard. He would not do it,' Pelosi said. 'That day he didn't do it. He forgave those people.' Gomez spoke of the furor with which the events unfolded that day. 'There was 50,000 people outside,' Gomez said. 'They were scaling the walls, scaling the walls. They were bashing in, breaking in, with members of Congress, members of Congress, trapped in the gallery, including myself, including a lot of the people here.' Earlier this year, Trump issued more than 1,500 pardons or commutations for the Jan. 6 rioters on his first day in office. Among the crimes Trump dissolved was that of Stager, a 44-year-old truck driver from Arkansas who was sentenced to four years in prison for the flagpole assault. According to prosecutors, Stager was caught on a Jan. 6 video saying, 'Every single one of those Capitol law enforcement officers, death is the remedy, that is the only remedy they get.' Dunn, the former U.S. Capitol police officer, noted that the same Republicans who are in lockstep with Trump at this moment in California are the same ones who have refused to display a plaque commemorating those who died and were injured on Jan. 6. 'What about the blue from Jan. 6th? They don't even want to put the plaque up! Back the blue that way then,' Dunn added. 'It's hypocritical and they're aware that it's all about appeasing their base and appeasing the leader of their party, which is Donald Trump.'