The forces unleashed by the US election
results continue to drive the capital markets. The combination of nationalism, reflation and
deregulation are seen as good for US
equities and the US dollar. It has not been so kind to US Treasuries, where the 10- and 30-year yield has
risen about 32 bp this week coming into today's federal holiday that closes the
bond market, while the stock market is open.
The rising US
yields, anticipated trade policy, has hit emerging markets particularly hard. Many Asian countries are predisposed to manage their
currencies, and the downside pressure on them has seen a wave of intervention
today, according to reports. Contrary to ideas of "race to the
bottom" or "currency wars" were "everyone" wants
weaker currencies, a number of Asian
central banks are believed to have sold dollars and bought their own currencies to slow the descent.
Flows out of
the emerging markets are one of the
important themes to have emerged in recent days. The MSCI Emerging Market equity
index fell for the third consecutive session. The 2.4% decline so far
today brings the three-day decline to almost 6%. The index is at its
lowest level since July.
Of note,
China's markets are resilient in the face of the reassessment of emerging
markets. The yuan is fallen about 0.7% this week, making it among the
best performing Asian currencies this week, with only the fixed Hong Kong
dollar and Indian rupee doing better this week. We note that there the
Indian officials are believed to have intervened today as the rupee slipped to seven-week lows. The Shanghai Composite
rose about 0.8% today to take the five-day advance to 2.25%, reaching its
highest level since January. If Brexit and the US election represents a
new expression of nationalism, China's nationalism may put it in a relatively
better position than other countries.
Among the major
currencies, there has been only one that has outperformed the US dollar this week, and it is the British pound. Ir recouped the losses from earlier
in the week yesterday and is extending those gains today. At $1.2660, it
has risen 1.1% on the week and has surpassed the flash crash high (~$1.2625)
for the first time. It has also met the 50% retracement objective of the
last notable high from September 6 (~$1.3440). The next retracement is seen near $1.2830.
Sterling's
gains are partly a function of unwinding short positions,
especially against the euro. The euro's decline against sterling this week (~3.6% at
GBP0.8575) is the most since early 2009. It is the second consecutive
weekly decline and is only the third such decline since early September.
The driving force is not so much a reassessment of the UK as much as the
recognition that EMU is particularly vulnerable to the rise of
nationalism.
The next
blow against globalization and integration is seen to come from the eurozone. The Italian referendum and the Austrian presidential
election are about three weeks away. Somewhat more down the field is the Dutch election in Q1 17 and the
French presidential election next spring in which the National Front's odds of
winning are seen to have increased over the past few days.
European shares
as measured by the Dow Jones Stoxx 600 is
up about 3% this week, though is narrowly mixed today. However, the more acute pressure is coming from the adjustment of interest
rates. European bonds continue to sell-off, and in the rising interest rate
environment, the spreads against Germany are widening. It is not just in the
periphery, but the French premium over Germany on 10-year money has widened by 10 bp to more than 40 bp. It is the most
in five months.
Italy's 10-year
benchmark yield has risen nearly 25 bp this week, pushing the yield to 2%, its
highest in more than a year. Rising sovereign yields may weigh on
Italian banks, which are large holders of
government bonds. Italian banks have fared well so far the face of the
dramatic rise in yields, but are snapping a four-day advance today with a minor
loss.
The euro has
steadied after approaching last month's low near $1.0850. It is off 2.4% on
the week. With today's minor slippage, it has extended its losing streak
to the fifth consecutive session, snapping the four-day advance seen last week.
Below the $1.0850 are the March lows near $1.0820, and the lower
Bollinger Band comes in a little below there.
We see two main
forces weighing on it. The first, we have already
mentioned, and that is the political calendar and the forces of nationalism.
The second is the widening interest rate differential between the US and
Germany. The two-year spread finished last week near 142 bp. It
closed yesterday near 153 bp. The US Treasury market is closed today,
so the slight narrowing is a result of the small rise in the German two-year
yield. The ECB is expected to announce the extension of its asset
purchases next month beyond the soft March 2017 end-date, while the market is more confident of a Fed hike a couple
of weeks later.
While sterling has been the best performing major
currency, the Japanese yen has been the worst. It has fallen a little
less than 3% this week. The dollar's five-day advance against the yen may be in the process of being
snapped. Near midday in London, the dollar is off about 0.6% to near
JPY106.00. It has run into some offers near JPY107.00. Given the sharp
advance from the initial drop to JPY101.20 on the US election results, the
initial support on a break of JPY106 is not
found until closer to JPY104.75JPY105.00.
Disclaimer
Ramifications of Trump's Election Continue to Drive Markets
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
November 11, 2016
Rating: