|

Stock Market: Most of yesterdays gains were reversed today

Most of yesterdays gains were reversed today as early currency performance tended to replace equities. Selling in the Nikkei ahead of year end was somewhat counterbalanced by the Yen’s 1% appreciation. Selling of auto’s, industrials and steel producers weighed on the Nikkei which also led to renewed buying of JGB’s. In late US trading the Yen has backed away from the high print (112.75) and looks comfortable in the low 113’s. Shanghai and the Hang Seng saw similar trading patterns today, both rallying to finish positive, but only in the final hour. Australian All Ord’s lost 1% after the unchanged central bank decision hit financials. The CNY continued its positive move, following the weekends headline, which sees it 1% better now trading around the 6.835 level.

In Europe the main news focus centred on BREXIT and the decision by the ECJ (European Court of Justice) stating that the UK can cancel BREXIT! This was initially good news for Sterling and saw it rally almost 1% to 1.2835. However, sense probably entered the market and realised that this could very well have all counterparties initiating their own exit only to cancel 18months later! Cable and the Euro then turned and was last seen -0.4% lower on the day to the USD. Also, Mark Carney voiced more negative opinion to the MP’s on the Treasury Committee today and was followed by various members of explaining the BOE’s does not take specific FDI into account. On core European indices its worth noting that YTD numbers on most of the major sectors for European indices have been shocking. Auto and financials have been the worst with negative returns of around -20% whilst utilities are a small positive return. In late trading news that the government has lost the first two votes (DUP opposing them) and talk that they need to publish the full legal opinion and not just a precise.

US opened weak and simply fell away. At one stage all core indices were off around 3% and again being led by the tech. That said, financials were not that far behind as they worry about the inverting Treasury yield curve. First we saw 3’s/5’s invert and that gradually worked it way along to 2’s/5’s. The much watched 2’s/10’s is a little under 12bp, but will be much watched during Fridays employment data release. We do have a heavy Bills calendar this week and that is probably not helping the cause and with a shortened trading week is bound to exaggerate volatility. Towards the close all core indices did attempt a bounce, but unfortunately the short week and thin volume has seen more pressure into the close as fears of a slowing economy spreading eventually hits the US.

Japan 0.07%, US 2’s closed 2.80% (-3bp), US 10’s 2.92% (-8bp), US 30’s 3.17% (-12bp), Bunds 0.26% (-4bp), France 0.66% (-3bp), Italy 3.15% (+1bp), Turkey 16.20% (+12bp), Greece 4.20% (+3bp), Portugal 1.80% (u/c), Spain 1.48% (-1bp) and UK Gilts 1.28% (-3bp).

Author

Martin Armstrong

Martin Armstrong

Armstrong Economics

Armstrong pursued his studies of economics searching for answers behind the cycle of boom and busts that plagued society both in Princeton and in London.

More from Martin Armstrong
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD keeps the bid bias just over 1.1800

EUR/USD has started the week on a positive foot, hovering around the 1.1800 region in the latter part of Monday’s session. The pair’s recovery comes on the back of a decent decline in the US Dollar, as investors keep their attention on the evolving US–EU trade relationship after President Trump’s announcement of sweeping global tariff hikes.

GBP/USD looks stuck around 1.3500 amid firm gains

GBP/USD is pushing further north on Monday, revisiting the 1.3500 hurdle and beyond. Cable’s uptick is largely being fuelled by the broader softness in the Greenback, amid lingering uncertainty around tariffs.

Gold pops above $5,200, four-week highs

Gold is holding onto its bullish tone on Monday, reaching new multi-week highs just past the $5,200 mark per troy ounce. Fresh trade-war concerns, coupled with rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, are keeping demand for the yellow metal well on the rise.

Crypto Today: Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP intensify sell-off as tariff uncertainty weighs

Bitcoin, Ethereum and Ripple are trading amid increasing selling pressure at the time of writing on Monday, as investors react to fresh trade uncertainty over US President Donald Trump’s push for more tariffs.

Supreme Court nixes tariffs, Trump teases 15% global tariff

On February 20th, the Supreme Court ruled that Trump’s global tariffs under IEEPA authority were unconstitutional, effectively nullifying the framework. However, the relief was short-lived. Within hours, Trump floated a 15% blanket tariff under an alternative legal authority.

XRP recovers slightly as bearish sentiment dominates crypto market

Ripple is rising above $1.40 at the time of writing on Monday amid fresh tariff-triggered headwinds in the broader cryptocurrency market. The sell-off to $1.33, the token’s intraday low, can be attributed to macroeconomic uncertainty, geopolitical tensions and risk-averse sentiment among other factors.