Morning Bid: US stocks stabilise as Europe keeps surging

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  • Mar 18, 2025

(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.)

By Mike Dolan

LONDON (Reuters) - What matters in U.S. and global markets today

By Mike Dolan, Editor-At-Large, Financial Industry and Financial Markets

U.S. stocks stabilised for the second day on Monday, as details of the February U.S. retail sales report calmed some of the worst fears about American consumers. Meanwhile, global stocks pushed higher on European stimulus bets.

Today, I'll take a look at the Bank of England, one of the big central banks meeting this week. While the BoE is expected to hold tight at the upcoming meeting, I'll discuss why it could be set to surprise investors. For this and more market news, keep on reading.

Today's Market Minute

* Allocations to U.S. stocks saw the biggest drop ever in March with concerns over stagflation, trade wars and end of U.S. exceptionalism driving a "bull crash" in sentiment, a survey of investors from BofA Global Research showed on Tuesday.

* Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney says Trump has to stop making "disrespectful" comments about his country before the two sides can start serious talks about future ties.

* Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin will hold a call today to discuss power plants and land concessions by Kyiv as part of their talks to end war in Ukraine.

* Germany's lower house of parliament is set to vote on Tuesday a massive surge in borrowing that could boost Europe's largest economy and stimulate growth across the region.

* Trump's tariffs will drag down growth in the US, Canada and Mexico, while driving up inflation, according to forecasts from the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development.

Wall Street steadies as Europe soars

Even though the headline gain in last month's U.S. retail sales number was below forecast, the details of the report were more positive. This offered some solace to nervy markets who also had to absorb another worrying manufacturing survey and an additional down tick in housebuilder sentiment.

Industrial production and housing starts are next up on Tuesday, with the Federal Reserve starting its two-day meeting, which is likely to end with the FOMC voting to keep its main interest rate on hold.

Wall Street futures slipped back again ahead of Tuesday's bell, with Big Tech continuing to underperform on Monday and indexes of the so-called Magnificent Seven megacaps in the red again despite gains for the wider S&P 500.

Another 5% drop in the share price of auto giant Tesla was a standout move of the day.

U.S. Treasury yields continue to nudge higher leading into the Fed meeting, with an auction of 20-year bonds set for later today. The dollar, by contrast, was on the backfoot early on Tuesday, eyeing its lowest point of the year as the euro surged anew on Germany's fiscal plans.

Germany's lower house of parliament is set to vote on Tuesday on a massive surge in borrowing that could boost Europe's largest economy and stimulate growth across the region, even as the bloc faces trade tensions with the United States.

Euro zone stocks were up another 1% earlier, with German midcaps rising more than 2%.

While no major policy changes are expected at any of the big monetary policy meetings this week, the pressure on the BOE to ease may be mounting more than elsewhere. That's the subject of today's deep dive.

Maybe BoE should 'cut through the noise'

In a week when major central banks are expected to remain static, caught in a storm of disruptive U.S. policymaking, the Bank of England may be the one with most reason to cut to the chase.

Monetary policymakers face a potential double whammy from U.S. President Donald Trump's planned April tariff hikes, as they could hit global growth while also spurring prices. The Federal Reserve, Bank of Japan, Swiss National Bank and Bank of England are therefore all expected to sit on their hands this week and watch what unfolds.

The BoE also has to factor in domestic considerations, namely the political optics of shifting policy just a week before UK finance minister Rachel Reeves updates her budget plans and economic expectations.

And yet, there is no shortage of reasons why BoE policymakers may be tempted to ease, regardless of the policy fog overseas and the smoke and mirrors at home.

Britain's struggling economy began the year with another surprise contraction in January. And a bruising growth forecast downgrade from the BoE itself last month was compounded by another cut in the UK's 2025 outlook by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development on Monday.

While Reeves may be anxious about meeting her own fiscal targets given the likely sputtering of government revenues, an additional squeeze on government spending now seems self-defeating, not least because it would come on top of the employer tax rises that kick in next month.

So the case for using monetary policy to break the economic logjam is building, despite the hand-wringing about sticky wage and services inflation.

The fascinating bit of the BoE drama is that the calls for easing are increasingly coming from within the bank's own ranks.

MANN DOWN

In one of the most dramatic shifts within the BoE's rate-setting committee in recent years, policymaker Catherine Mann switched from resident hawk to uber dove at the BoE meeting in early February.

Mann voted for a half-point rate cut, which was double the eventual move. She switched sides within the nine-person council at a critical juncture, joining more recognized dove Swati Dhingra in calling for a 50-basis-point reduction to 4.25%.

Illustrating the significance of this change, BoE data on voting records show it was the first time Mann had ever voted for a rate reduction in the 28 meetings since she joined the policymaking council in late 2021.

For the record, she voted for 18 hikes in that period and voted for a higher rate than the eventual decision at 11 of the 28 meetings.

If you're going to turn, better to turn big.

GRADUALISM 'NO LONGER VALID'

Mann justified her shift by arguing that the BoE's 2% inflation target is reachable in the next year because UK companies will struggle to raise prices as consumers are hit by job losses and softening spending.

But her most telling reveal was when she said last month that a half-point move was needed to "cut through the noise" and make clear to the financial system that easier conditions were currently necessary in the UK.

And to her credit, there is certainly no shortage of noise right now, both at home and abroad.

In statements earlier this month, she doubled down: "With substantial volatility coming from financial markets, especially from cross-border spillovers, the founding premise for a gradualist approach to monetary policy is no longer valid."

Mann's concern that small quarter-point moves are not going to make much of a difference in the current environment rings true. In fact, it's one of the reasons everyone assumes rates will be left unchanged, awaiting more clarity.

All 61 economists polled by Reuters this week expect the BoE to leave rates on hold at 4.5%, with the next cut not likely until May.

The Reuters poll also pointed to a 7-2 split on the committee in favour of keeping rates on hold, with Mann and Dhingra pushing for more.

Some banks, such as Morgan Stanley, see the split deepening to 6-3, with the newest member, Alan Taylor, likely to join the dissenters, having voted for a cut in three of his four meetings to date.

And Clare Lombardelli, another recent and dovish addition to the committee, could be in the mix too.

Meanwhile, markets are pricing in relatively hawkish policy, with barely two additional BoE cuts expected for the remainder of 2025, meaning year-end rates would be just under 4%. That's higher than the expectations for the Fed or the European Central Bank.

There's ample room for surprise.

Chart of the day

Even though Wall Street stock indexes stabilised on Monday, 'Big Tech' continued to underperform and Elon Musk's Tesla swerved again, dropping another 5% as brokers downgraded the electric vehicle maker's price target. Tesla's stock is now down more than 40% for the year to date.

By contrast, Hong Kong shares of Chinese EV maker BYD surged 6% on Tuesday and have jumped almost 40% in dollar terms this year. BYD's latest surge came after it unveiled a new platform for EVs that it said could charge EVs as quickly as it takes to pump gas and after it announced plans to build a charging network across China.

Today's events to watch

* U.S. February housing starts/permits, February industrial production, February import/export prices; Canada Feb inflation

* U.S. Federal Reserve's Federal Open Market Committee and Bank of Japan both start two-day policy meetings, with decisions from both on Wednesday

* French President Emmanuel Macron meets outgoing German Chancellor Olaf Scholz in Berlin

* US Treasury sells $13 billion of 20-year bonds

Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.

(By Mike Dolan; Editing by Rod Nickel)