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Good morning. Here's what you need to know.
  • Overnight trading in Asia was mixed, with Japan's Nikkei adding 0.3 percent. European markets are modestly lower this morning and U.S. futures point to a negative open. 
  • Two readings of Chinese manufacturing showed conflicting results, with HSBC's survey indicating output decelerating at the second-fastest rate in three years. The HSBC report logged a 130 basis point fall to 48.3 in March. Separately, a Li & Fung report showed Chinese PMI at 53.1, up from 51.0 last month. A reading above 50 represents expansion.

  • The Bank of Japan's Tankan Survey of manufacturers continued to reflect pessimism in the market, with an unchanged reading at -4. Economists had anticipated an advance to -1. Small and medium enterprises saw worsening conditions. 


  • Eurozone PMI indexes fell nearly across the board, with France and Germany declining to 46.7 and 48.4, respectively. The fall in Germany was better than expected however, with consensus for a 48.1 reading. Click here to see the strongest markets during the first quarter. 

  • Unemployment in the 17-nation euro-area jumped 10 basis points to 10.8 percent, the highest figure in more than 14 years. The number was in line with estimates. 



  • Two major economic announcements are scheduled in the U.S. at 10:00 a.m.: construction spending and ISM manufacturing. Economists forecast spending increased 0.7 percent sequentially in February. The ISM index is anticipated to increase to 53.1 in March from its last reading of 52.4.