By Julia Horowitz • Wednesday, October 2 | | | Good Wednesday morning. 📲 In today's newsletter: Manufacturing troubles deepen, the case for European stocks and the price war among online brokers. US stock futures point lower after the Dow and S&P 500 on Tuesday logged their worst day since August. Markets in Europe lost ground in early trading, taking a cue from stocks in Asia. ▸ Forwarded this newsletter? Want global markets news and analysis from CNN Business reporters every morning? You can sign up here. | | What's happening now in markets: MARKET DATA AS OF 6:10 AM ET | | MARKET FLASH The world's factories are in trouble The world's factories are hurting because of the trade war. That much is clear. US manufacturing activity contracted for the second month in a row in September, bucking expectations for a slight recovery. The Institute for Supply Management's closely-watched manufacturing index dropped to 47.8, its lowest level since June 2009. Why? "Global trade remains the most significant issue, as demonstrated by the contraction in new export orders that began in July 2019," said Timothy Fiore, chair of the ISM's manufacturing business survey committee. A company that makes machinery cited softening demand and reduced backlogs. "The tariffs have caused much confusion in the industry," one electrical equipment, appliance and components manufacturer said. Not mentioned, as my CNN Business colleague Matt Egan points out: the Federal Reserve, which President Donald Trump quickly said was to blame. It's true that a strong dollar makes it harder for US companies to export their goods. But analysts argue that it's the trade war, not the Fed, that is contributing to the dollar's strength. Nervous about the global economic slowdown and trade policy, investors are dumping foreign currencies in favor of the greenback, Matt writes. | | The US manufacturing data immediately sparked chatter about rising recession risks. That's in part because the state of global industry is so woeful, raising questions about how long the services sector can continue to compensate for losses. See here: Germany's leading economic research institutes on Wednesday slashed their forecasts for economic growth for this year and next, blaming in part "the falling worldwide demand for capital goods." German GDP growth for the year is now forecast at just 0.5%. "German industry is now in recession, and this is now also impacting the service providers catering to those companies," said Claus Michelsen of the German Institute for Economic Research. Watch this space: The Institute for Supply Management's non-manufacturing index arrives Thursday. You can bet that investors will watch for similar trends. | | VOICES On grim manufacturing data "The disappointing data is only fanning long-standing fears of slowing global growth." ALEC YOUNG, MANAGING DIRECTOR OF GLOBAL MARKETS RESEARCH AT FTSE RUSSELL Follow CNN Business' live coverage of markets here. | | EYE ON EUROPE JPMorgan: It's time to buy European stocks | | Despite a looming Brexit, political uncertainty in Italy and a likely German recession, this is the moment to buy European stocks. That rare advice came in a note from JPMorgan to clients this week, which said the bank now favors European stocks over US shares. The argument? After nearly two years of outflows, European stocks look like a good deal. And with support from the European Central Bank, as well as growing expectations for fiscal stimulus, they could be poised for a rebound. "We now believe that there is an opportunity for Eurozone [stocks] to bounce back," wrote Mislav Matejka, the firm's head of global and European equity strategy. JPMorgan's recommendation is a bold one. In the past 18 months, eurozone stocks have underperformed US shares by more than 20% in dollar terms, per the bank's own analysis. And Matejka concedes plenty of reasons to worry about the path ahead — chief among them the worrying economic data that's been flowing out of Europe. Despite this, Matejka and his team see room for optimism. That's largely thanks to recent stimulus efforts by the European Central Bank, which could support European assets, as well as growing anticipation of fiscal stimulus in the region. "Meaningfully stronger fiscal support is unlikely anytime soon, [but] we believe that equity markets could start to price in increasing odds of this happening," JPMorgan wrote. | | UP NEXT Bed Bath & Beyond reports earnings after US markets close. Also today → ▸ ADP's US employment report for September arrives at 8:15 a.m. ET. ▸ US Energy Information Administration reports on crude oil inventories at 10:30 a.m. ET. Coming tomorrow: Can US services withstand the manufacturing slump? | | WHAT WE'RE READING AND WATCHING ▸ US slowdown spurs concerns the economy is close to stalling (Bloomberg) ▸ Airbnb could save in the IPO market ... in 2020 (CNN Business) ▸ Facebook scrambles to keep Libra on track as partners waver (WSJ) ▸ Zuckerberg: An Elizabeth Warren presidency would 'suck' for FB (The Verge) ▸ Johnson & Johnson settles Ohio opioid lawsuits for $20.4 million (CNN) ▸ Vice Media is closing in on Refinery29 acquisition (CNN Business) ▸ Did JPMorgan cause recent problems in the US "repo" markets? (Reuters) | | | OKAY, SO... The online broker wars are in full swing An all-out price war has hit the online brokerage industry, my CNN Business colleague Paul La Monica writes. On Tuesday, Charles Schwab — under pressure from free trading apps like Robinhood — said it would eliminate commissions for trading stocks, ETFs and options on its mobile and web platforms. Shares fell nearly 10%. Before the day was over, TD Ameritrade — whose shares had nosedived almost 26% — responded in turn and matched the offer. My thought bubble: In an intensely low- or no-fee environment, platforms are clearly worried about getting new customers in the door. Presumably, the goal here is to score headlines, gain new clients — and then direct them toward other products that actually gain revenue. But Schwab and TD Ameritrade's investors clearly aren't buying that strategy just yet. | | | | |
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