|

The EU agrees on a fourth package of sanctions against Russia after several days of debating

Markets

US stock markets again failed to cling to opening gains, ending up to 2% lower for Nasdaq. The S&P 500 follows the two other major indices in painting a technical “death cross” on the charts (200d moving average < 50d moving average), suggesting more downside. The tech giant Nasdaq now entered bear market territory as the index is now more than 20% below the all-time high in November 2021. The (US) stock sell-off again went hand-in-hand with sales in US Treasuries. This correlation suggests that runaway inflation and global (monetary) policy normalization are firmly back in the driver’s seat as market theme. At the height of the Russian invasion, global core bonds briefly played their role as safe haven asset. In the wake of last week’s ECB meeting and going into this week’s Fed and BoE gatherings, investors are again scaling up their normalization/tightening bets. US yields added 11.3 bps (2-yr) to 15 bps (7-yr) with the belly of the curve underperforming the wings. US yields reached multi-year highs at the 2-to-10 sector of the curve. The German yield curve bear steepened with yields adding 6.5 bps (2-yr) to 12.3 bps (30-yr) higher. The German 10-yr yield set a new recovery high at 0.37%. Next technical resistance stands at 0.58%. Peripheral yield spreads remarkably kept stable. The single currency slightly had the upper hand over the dollar and sterling. EUR/USD and EUR/GBP ended the day slightly firmer at respectively 1.0940 and 0.8415. Moves continue this morning. USD/JPY extends it’s race to the top with the pair closing above 118 for the first time since early 2017. Next high profile resistance at 118.66 is nearby. It’s the final big hurdle ahead of the 2015 top at 125.86. JPY is the stand-out loser in the normalization race, after being hit by the commodity rally at the height of the Russian war in Ukraine. EUR/CHF extends its rebound higher after briefly touching parity last week. EUR/CHF trades back above 1.03. CEE currencies enjoyed a huge relief rally.

Chinese assets remain in freefall this morning. Apart from new strict lockdowns and tougher regulation, they react disappointed as the PBOC refrained from easing monetary policy further (see below). The damage again remains confined to China. Today’s eco calendar contains US PPI data, empire manufacturing survey and EMU production figures. They won’t alter reigning trading dynamics ahead of the Fed meeting. UK labour market data printed strong this morning. Wage growth accelerated further with February payrolls suggesting renewed vigour for the labour market after some stabilization around the turn of the year. The unemployment rate slid further to 3.9% in the Nov-Jan period, the lowest since January 2020. The data strengthen the case for another BoE rate hike later this week.

News headlines

The February Chinese economic update came in better than expected as government support started kicking in. Industrial production rose 7.5% vs 4% expected in the first two months of the year compared to the same period in 2021. Retail sales grew , 6.7% YtDbeating the 3% consensus. Property investments defied expectations of a 7% decline to be up 3.7% and fixed assets investments jumped 12.2%. The strength of this month’s data may have been the reason for the PBOC to surprise markets and to not cut rates on the 1-yr lending facility this morning (2.85%). But downside risks loom large, ranging from the regulatory crackdown over the reintroduction of lockdowns to fallout of the war (commodity prices). The data also highlight the ongoing housing market cooldown as residential property sales slump more than 22% YtD, adding to the economic risks. The Chinese yuan extends a recent losing streak to trade at the weakest level since the start of the year at USD/CNY 6.38.

The EU agreed on a fourth package of sanctions against Russia after several days of heavy debating. Measures include banning the sale to Russia of luxury goods worth more than €300 and of luxury cars, boats and planes of more than €50 000, Bloomberg reported based on a draft. Purchases of many Russian steel and iron (finished) products will also be banned as well as new investments in Russian energy projects. There are exemptions included. For example, the new package does not target transactions needed for purchasing or transporting Russian fossil fuels nor are titanium, aluminum, copper, nickel, palladium and iron ore subject to the restrictions.

Download The Full Sunrise Market Commentary

Author

KBC Market Research Desk

KBC's Market Research Desk publishes a number of short-term reports.

More from KBC Market Research Desk
Share:

Editor's Picks

AUD/USD falls to near 0.7100 after slipping below 50-day EMA

AUD/USD depreciates after registering minor gains in the previous day, trading around 0.7120 during the Asian hours. The technical analysis of the daily chart shows the pair consolidating sideways within a rectangle pattern, as neither bulls nor bears gain control. The AUD/USD pair is holding a slight bearish tone however as it sits beneath both the nine-day and 50-day EMAs.

160.00: USD/JPY back near intervention territory after upbeat US jobs report

US Nonfarm Payrolls beat expectations by a wide margin in May, with 172K jobs added. The US Dollar rebounds after the release, helping USD/JPY recover from its intraday lows. Warnings from Japanese authorities continue to limit upside potential near the 160.00 threshold.

Gold targets $4,300 amid stronger Dollar

Gold faces increasing selling interest and navigates the area of three-month lows near the $4,300 mark per troy ounce on Friday. The precious metal’s decline comes as traders assess the stronger-than-expected NFP, while the bid bias in the Greenback and higher US Treasury yields also collaborate with the retracement.

Cardano hits five-year low even as Hoskinson clarifies "break" isn't an exit

Cardano (ADA) price is down 10% at press time on Friday, extending losses over 30% so far this week amid Charles Hoskinson's clarification that "break" isn't an exit.

Week ahead – Fed countdown begins amid US inflation data and geopolitical risks

Fed Chair Warsh’s first meeting approaches as key US inflation data could reshape expectations. Oil prices remain elevated as US-Iran talks continue; tariffs also return to the spotlight. ECB is expected to hike; will it be a one-off move or is July live?

The US economy defies the rules: 100 days into the Oil shock and the recession signal is still missing

More than three months after the start of the Iran war and the resulting disruption to global energy markets, the US economy continues to display remarkable resilience. The conflict has triggered a sharp rise in Oil prices, reignited inflationary pressures and fueled widespread concerns about a potential economic slowdown.