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MORNING BID EUROPE-Venezuela upheaval tests markets

MORNING BID EUROPE-Venezuela upheaval tests markets
MORNING BID EUROPE-Venezuela upheaval tests markets

Gregor Stuart Hunter gives us a look at what the future holds for European and global markets.

The dramatic weekend that saw U.S. forces capture Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has caused the oil market to be roiled as the first full trading week of 2019 begins, even though the global stock markets appear to have ignored geopolitical risk for the moment.

Brent crude futures fluctuated between gains and losses, but ended the day at $60.49. Traders are assessing the impact of the U.S. military attack on Venezuela, the country with the largest reserves of oil in the world, on global crude supplies.

In recent hours, U.S. president Donald?Trump said that U.S. troops might launch a military strike against Venezuela if the remaining members of the?administration do not cooperate in his efforts to "fix" the country. He also hinted at future action in Colombia and Mexico.

OPEC+ - which pumps half of the world's crude oil - also maintained its output on Sunday, after a brief meeting that avoided discussing the political crisis affecting some of the group's member producers.

Venezuela's PDVSA, the state-run oil company, has cut back on crude production because of a lack of storage space due to the ongoing U.S. blockade.

The stock market has taken geopolitical worries in stride. Many of the winners from last year in Asia have extended their gains. The Nikkei rose as much as 2,9%, nearing a record set two months earlier. Data showed that manufacturing activity had stabilised in December after a five-month decline.

Taiwan's Kospi rallied by more than 3,4% and Seoul's Kospi rose 2.9% to new record highs. The shares of Samsung Electronics rose up to 6.5% due to the general buoyant market sentiment. According to its co-CEO, the company plans to double the number its mobile devices this year with AI powered by Google Gemini.

The Hang Seng Index fell 0.1%, as Chinese oil companies?dragged the index down. A measure of Hong Kong listed energy stocks dropped 2.8%.

Early European trading saw pan-regional futures up 0.7%. German DAX Futures rose 0.5%. FTSE Futures rose 0.6%.

Market developments on Monday that may have a significant impact

Sentix Index: Euro Zone for January

U.K. BOE consumer credit and Mortgage Lending for November

Debt auctions:

France: 3-month-, 6-month- and 1-year government bonds

Germany: 3-month debt and 9-month debt

(source: Reuters)