|

Asia joins Friday’s sell-off, US Treasury Yield curve inverts as global growth worries spike

The selloff in US and European stock markets from Friday has spread across Asia at the start of the new trading week, as concerns over the health of the global economy heat up at a rapid pace.

Perhaps what is even more worrying for investor sentiment is that the US treasury yield curve has inverted for the first time since 2007. This development will psychologically encourage further anxiety and rocket fears that the global economy is heading for another downturn, if recent economic releases across the globe have not already provided indications that the downturn has arrived.

The heavy declines in global markets and inversion of the US Treasury Yield curve follow the fallout from a spectacular dovish-twist from the Federal Reserve after the conclusion of the latest monetary policy meeting last Wednesday, where suspicions are now making waves that the strongest performing developed market might need to cut interest rates as early as 2020. This downbeat view overall represents a spectacular U-turn in market expectations and joins the coordinated chorus of multiple different respected institutions, senior officials and global central bankers that have repeatedly pointed out that the world growth outlook is deteriorating.

Keep an eye on Yen moves

The Japanese Yen has managed to jump against the US Dollar since global markets commenced their tailspin, but Yen demand has not yet reached fever pitch when you consider that the Japanese Nikkei 225 is down over 3% at time of writing.

I would closely monitor how investors digest the inversion of the US Treasury Yield Curve as trading for the new week gets underway, because market panic has repeatedly acted as a magnet for Yen buying in the past and further negative market movement will make the prospect of adding further Yen flows into an investor portfolio an interesting conversation.

King Dollar Remains on the Throne

Perhaps the only reason why Gold prices have not surged on market uncertainty is due to the steady valuation of the US Dollar. Previous economic downturns have encouraged consistent demand for the Greenback, and there is a balanced view that the Dollar will be able to reign supreme on its throne if further economic releases this week strengthen the view that world economic momentum is decelerating at a faster pace than anticipated.

The US Dollar is justifying its current valuation given that the US economy remains in a far superior position relative to its peers in the developed world. The Fed's revised forecasts for 2.1 percent growth this year, and 1.9 percent for 2020, are a celebration when compared to what the EU will be able to offer the world economy.

The recent string of dire economic announcements that have come out of the Eurozone paint a picture of concern that mean the EU economy will be fortunate if it even manages to achieve growth of 1% this year.

When you combine the dynamics between economic growth projections worldwide and the fact that the Euro makes up a large proportion of the Dollar Index, the Greenback should enter the second quarter of 2019 well-supported.

Brexit Saga Enters Make-Or-Break Stage

The DXY Index may also find a helping hand by expected volatility in the Pound this week, as UK lawmakers are poised to potentially vote on Theresa May's Brexit deal for a third time. It's hard to comprehend how exactly the UK Parliament will approve a deal that they've soundly rejected twice before. Speculation that some might be willing to support the deal if UK Prime Minister Theresa May agrees to step down adds in yet another cocktail of unpredictable risks for what could lie ahead for the British Pound.

Brussels has only granted the United Kingdom a short extension on the request to delay the March 29 departure date from the European Union and it should be monitored whether the short extension on offer will be enough to sway voters in Westminster.

In the unexpected event that May's Brexit deal gets the green light, this should send the GBPUSD back above the 1.33 handle as market confidence increases that the UK will be able to leave the European Union with a deal in hand.

Author

Jameel Ahmad

Jameel Ahmad

Compare Broker

Jameel Ahmad is an expert on international financial markets following a decade of professional experience in the brokerage sector.

More from Jameel Ahmad
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD seems fragile below 1.1700 as Middle East war boosts energy prices

The EUR/USD pair trades flat at around 1.1680 during the Asian trading session on Tuesday, but broadly seems vulnerable, being close to its five-week low. The major currency pair is under pressure as surging oil prices due to the United States-Israel war with Iran have increased the risks of higher inflation for the Old Continent.

GBP/USD hovers around 1.3400 with bearish pressure intact

GBP/USD edges higher after three days of losses, trading around 1.3400 during the Asian hours on Tuesday. The technical analysis of the daily chart indicates an ongoing bearish bias, as the pair trades within a descending channel pattern.

Gold sticks to gains above $5,350 amid sustained safe-haven demand; firmer USD caps gains

Gold sticks to its positive bias for the third straight day and trades above the $5,350 level heading into the European session on Tuesday. Concerns about a broader regional conflict in the Middle East continue to weigh on investors' sentiment and underpin demand for the traditional safe-haven bullion.

Stellar risks deeper losses as derivatives metrics turn negative

Stellar is trading red below $0.16 at the time of writing on Tuesday, after a slight recovery the previous day. Weakening derivatives data caps the recovery, while an unfavorable technical outlook projects a deeper correction for the XLM token in the upcoming days.

The market is not panicking it is repricing the probability distribution of Oil and time

At the end of the day, markets do not trade morality or geopolitics. They trade transmission channels. And the only channel that truly matters in this maelstrom runs through the price of energy and the time value of money.

Hyperliquid Price Forecast: HYPE rises on commodities demand amid US-Iran war

Hyperliquid (HYPE) steadies above $33 at press time on Tuesday, marking its fourth consecutive day of recovery in a broadly volatile market due to the ongoing US-Israel strikes on Iran.