Entering text into the input field will update the search result below

The Capital Markets YoYo Continues

Mar. 05, 2020 9:09 AM ETUUP, FXE, FXY, EUO, FXC, FXA, UDN, YCS, CYB, ERO-OLD, USDU, CNY, JYNFF, DRR, ULE, CROC, EUFX, FXCH, URR, YCL, DEUR, UJPY, DJPY, UAUD, DAUD, UEUR, DLBR2 Comments
Marc Chandler profile picture
Marc Chandler
15.93K Followers

Summary

  • Foreigners continue to sell Korean shares, but fully offsetting it and more, are their purchases of Korean bonds.
  • The head of Australia's Treasury warned that his country will likely experience its first quarterly contraction in nine years but expects a recovery in Q2, avoiding the rule-of-thumb definition of a recession.
  • For the second consecutive session, the euro found solid bids below $1.11 yesterday and is consolidating inside yesterday's range today.

Overview: The 4.2% rally in the S&P 500 yesterday helped lift Asia Pacific markets earlier today, and the five basis point backing up of the US 10-year yield pushed regional yields higher. However, the coattails proved short, and Europe's Dow Jones Stoxx 600 is snapping a three-day advance and is off about 1.3% in late morning turnover to give back yesterday's gains. US shares are also trading heavily, and the S&P 500 looks almost 2% lower. European benchmark 10-year yields are mostly 1-3 bp firmer, though German Bund yields are slightly softer. The US 10-year yield is pushing back to nearly 95 bp as it unwinds yesterday's pick-up. The dollar is lower against almost all of the major currencies, but the Canadian dollar and the Norwegian krone. The liquid, accessible emerging market currencies are softer, including the South African rand, Turkish lira, and Mexican peso. The South Korean won was the strongest, with a 0.5% gain. Foreigners continue to sell Korean shares, but fully offsetting it and more, are their purchases of Korean bonds. Gold and oil are consolidating inside yesterday's ranges. OPEC+ meet, and many expect that the current cuts in production will be extended, while extra cuts of around 750k barrels per day can be cut for a quarter or two.

Asia Pacific

Foreign investors continued to buy negative-yielding Japanese bonds last week, according to MOF figures. It was the sixth consecutive week of purchases, during which time they bought about $39 bln, the most in a six-week period in over a year. Many seem to be buying on a hedged basis. Consider that a dollar-based investor buys a short-dated JGB yielding minus 25 bp, hedging the yen back into dollars, one is paid sufficiently to turn the overall yield of the trade into more than a US two-year Treasury.

This article was written by

Marc Chandler profile picture
15.93K Followers
Marc Chandler has been covering the global capital markets in one fashion or another for 25 years, working at economic consulting firms and global investment banks. A prolific writer and speaker he appears regularly on CNBC and has spoken for the Foreign Policy Association. In addition to being quoted in the financial press daily, Chandler has been published in the Financial Times, Foreign Affairs, and the Washington Post. In 2009 Chandler was named a Business Visionary by Forbes. Marc's commentary can be found at his blog (www.marctomarket.com) and twitter www.twitter.com/marcmakingsense

Recommended For You

Comments (2)

M
Thank you very much for this wealth of information and knowledge.
Marc Chandler profile picture
Thank you for your kind words. Check out my blog: www.marctomarket.com
Disagree with this article? Submit your own. To report a factual error in this article, . Your feedback matters to us!

Related Stocks

SymbolLast Price% Chg
UUP--
Invesco DB US Dollar Index Bullish Fund ETF
FXE--
Invesco CurrencyShares® Euro Currency Trust ETF
FXY--
Invesco CurrencyShares® Japanese Yen Trust ETF
EUO--
ProShares UltraShort Euro ETF
FXC--
Invesco CurrencyShares® Canadian Dollar Trust ETF

Related Analysis

To ensure this doesn’t happen in the future, please enable Javascript and cookies in your browser.
Is this happening to you frequently? Please report it on our feedback forum.
If you have an ad-blocker enabled you may be blocked from proceeding. Please disable your ad-blocker and refresh.