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MORNING BID Europe-Bonfire the vanities

Rocky Swift gives us a look at what the future holds for European and global markets.

Donald Trump knew what the markets needed. With a U.S. shutdown and the threat of tariffs, he was prepared. Tariffs.

As is becoming a routine, Asian markets were first to digest the overnight announcements by the White House about new U.S. Import duties. This time, the duties applied to bathroom vanities and cabinets. Trump's announcement cited "national defense" as the reason for tariffs on furniture from abroad, which are due to begin on October 14. This follows duties on drugs and trucks that went into effect Wednesday. There has not been a breakthrough between Trump and the congressional Democrats in their talks to prevent a shutdown of government on October 14. Gold, a safe haven asset, reached a new record due to the fear of a government shutdown. China and Japan's data showed the impact of trade uncertainty on the two largest economies in the region. China's manufacturing output declined for the sixth consecutive month in September according to official data. A separate report revealed that Japan's factory production fell more than expected during August.

The Australian dollar gained a little on Tuesday after the central bank of the country held rates at the same level as expected and stated that global economic uncertainty remains high. The Asian stock markets were unfazed by the news, as MSCI's broadest ex Japan gauge added to its September gains of more than 5%, which was the best for a year. If Washington goes dark, the Friday release of the important non-farm payrolls for September would be halted. This data is a crucial input to the Federal Reserve's timing for further easing.

This puts other U.S. labor reports in the spotlight, including today's JOLTS report. Analysts expect that the data will show that job openings remained stable at 7.18 million in august.

Equity contracts indicated a negative opening for European markets. Euro Stoxx futures for the entire region were down 0.07%. German DAX Futures fell 0.06%. FTSE futures dipped 0.08%. U.S. Futures, S&P 500 E-minis were flat.

The following are the key developments that may influence Tuesday's markets:

- JOLTS August job openings, U.S. consumer sentiment for September

- Flash CPIs in Germany and France

British Q2 GDP

- Speeches from ECB president Christine Lagarde and Fed vice chair Philip Jefferson. Boston Fed President Susan Collins

(source: Reuters)