Making sense of the forces driving global markets |
By Jamie McGeever, Markets Columnist | |
|
- Wall Street rises across the board - the Dow gains 0.8%, the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq both rise 0.6%.
- The S&P 500 posts its highest close since Trump's April 2 'Liberation Day' and rises for a sixth day - its best run this year.
- The VIX volatility index falls below 24.0 for the first time since Trump's April 2 'Liberation Day' tariffs.
- Britain's FTSE 100 rises for a 12th consecutive day, its longest winning streak in more than eight years.
- U.S. Treasury yields fall to a three-week low, by as much as 5 basis points at the long end. The curve bull flattens.
- A day of reversal across G10 FX - the U.S. dollar index rises 0.3%, while the euro, sterling, yen and Swiss franc all fall a similar amount.
- Oil falls to a two-week low, with Brent crude futures down 2.4%. That brings the decline so far this week to 4%.
- Bitcoin up 1%, close to making multi-month highs above $95,857. Britain sets out new rules to boost confidence in crypto.
|
|
|
Do you want to make a deal? |
If it was a calm day in terms of headline stock, bond and currency moves on Tuesday, there was huge churn under the surface, particularly in the shares of firms reporting first quarter results and attempting to give guidance for the quarters ahead. The overall picture on Tuesday was reasonably upbeat. European shares rose for a sixth day, lifted by banks like HSBC and Deutsche Bank, while British stocks rose for a 12th day, a record winning streak last seen in December 2016-January 2017. Wall Street eventually made up its mind late in the day to join the rally. If markets are beholden to the constant twists and turns in the newsflow on tariffs and trade deals, investors definitely latched onto the positive ones on Tuesday. China has waived the 125% tariff on imports of ethane and some other products from the United States, U.S. trade secretary Howard Lutnick said a deal with an unnamed country has been reached, and President Donald Trump is set to soften auto tariffs. So even though Trump and China's President Xi Jinping may not be talking to each other yet, negotiations elsewhere are well underway. But investors' optimism may be fragile and fleeting - about 40 companies have removed or lowered their forward guidance in the first two weeks of the first-quarter earnings season, a Reuters analysis showed. Among them are General Motors, Sweden's Electrolux and Volvo, and Germany's Adidas and Porsche, who have pulled or slashed their 2025 forecasts because they don't have the visibility required to invest, spend, or plan ahead. Meanwhile, oil heavyweight BP reported a near-50% slump in profits and UPS said it would cut 20,000 jobs to lower costs. Cracks are starting to appear in the U.S. economy - data on Tuesday showed that pre-tariff stockpiling pushed the trade deficit to a record high in March, while job openings fell more than expected this month. |
Wednesday's earnings calendar is packed with major Asian, European and U.S. reports. The pick of the bunch will likely be from U.S. 'Magnificent Seven' constituents Microsoft and Meta. Investors are lurching between optimism, caution and pessimism on a daily basis, which explains why markets have largely flatlined for the last couple of weeks. This is a big week for earnings and economic data, and longer-term policy developments too. The U.S. Treasury on Wednesday announce its debt auction sizes for the coming quarter, and on Thursday the Bank of Japan sets interest rates. |
|
|
Why China won't 'weaponize' its U.S. Treasuries stash |
China's 'nuclear' option in its financial war with the United States has long been assumed to be rapidly liquidating its outsized Treasury bond holdings, as this could crash the dollar, jack up interest rates and disrupt the U.S. economy. Concerns about this potential threat have returned in recent weeks, as all-out trade war has broken out between the world's two largest economies. But this fear of 'mutually assured financial destruction' is, and has always been, a notion based more in myth than reality. Dollar-denominated assets made up 55% of China's official currency reserves at the end of 2019, the last official confirmation of this figure by China's State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE), down significantly from the peak of 79% in 2005. It was also below the prevailing global average in 2019 of 61%, according to International Monetary Fund data. Some of this has likely been offset by increased dollar holdings among state commercial banks, whose foreign portfolios are thought to be much more weighted toward dollar assets. But, like other countries, China has been steadily reducing its relative exposure to the greenback over the past 20 years. |
This trend is even clearer with regard to China's official holdings of U.S. Treasuries, which stood at $784 billion in February, according to U.S. Treasury data. That's down from a peak of $1.32 trillion in 2013 and is less than 3% of the $28 trillion Treasuries market, a far cry from the high of 14% that China commanded in 2011. China does own Treasuries held in other countries like Belgium, but again, the trend is clearly moving in the direction of less exposure to the U.S. These figures suggest that China's power to inflict damage in the U.S. bond market has been diluted considerably over the last decade. |
What could move markets tomorrow? |
- Huge day for Q1 earnings reports, including: Samsung, Glencore, UBS, Barclays, Microsoft and Meta.
- China PMIs (April)
- Japan retail sales, industrial production (March)
- Germany inflation (April, preliminary)
- Germany GDP (Q1, flash)
- Euro zone GDP (Q1, flash)
- U.S. GDP (Q1, advance)
- U.S. PCE inflation (March)
- U.S. Chicago PMI (April)
|
|
|
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. |
Trading Day is sent every weekday morning. Think your friend or colleague should know about us? Forward this newsletter to them. They can also sign up here. Want to stop receiving this email? Unsubscribe here . To manage which newsletters you're signed up for, click here. This email includes limited tracking for Reuters to understand whether you've engaged with its contents. For more information on how we process your personal information and your rights, please see our Privacy Statement. Terms & Conditions |
|
|
|
0 comentários:
Postar um comentário