Bonds bounce, stocks struggle, Bitcoin battered
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[January 11, 2018]
By Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - Worries about a U.S.-led
trade war put world stocks at risk of their first two day loss of the
year on Thursday, while bond markets bounced as China poured cold water
on reports that it might stop buying U.S. debt.
Europe's main bourses dipped in and out of the red [.EU] and MSCI's
world index was down 0.2 percent after Asian and emerging market
indexes[.T] had been pulled lower by warnings from Canada and Mexico
that NAFTA's days could be numbered.
Bitcoin also took a major beating, falling as much as 11 percent as
South Korea - one of the crytocurrency's biggest markets - said it was
drawing up laws to ban trading in it.
Benchmark government bonds bounced though after China's regulator said a
Bloomberg report that it was considering slowing or halting its U.S.
bond purchases, was possibly "fake news".
It also helped the dollar to its fourth gain in the last five days
against a basket of top world currencies [/FRX], having suffered one of
its worst years on record in 2017.
Against the yen, it added 0.4 percent to 111.83, after hitting a
six-week low of 111.27 yen in the previous session when it skidded 1.1
percent, its largest decline in almost eight months.
"The denial of the China story puts the dollar back where it was though
the yen is still strong, so to me that is the interesting move and
whether that is going to stick," said Saxo Bank's head of FX strategy
John Hardy.
"The 2.5 percent level on the Treasury is a line in the sand so U.S. CPI
(inflation) data tomorrow is going to be absolutely critical," he added,
talking about the view that higher inflation will encourage more U.S.
interest rate hikes.
U.S. 10-year Treasury yields - which move inverse to prices and are one
of the main drivers of global borrowing costs - pulled back to 2.544
percent from Wednesday's ten-month high of 2.597 percent.
Euro zone bond yields eased 1-3 basis points (bps) too, with Germany's
10-year Bund yield 3 bps off a two-month high at 0.46 percent.
The European Central Bank releases the minutes from its December meeting
later in the day but there was also some relief from Japan, another
source of pain for bond markets this week.
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The London Stock Exchange Group offices are seen in the City of
London, Britain, December 29, 2017. REUTERS/Toby Melville
The Bank of Japan (BOJ) maintained the amount of its bond purchases on Thursday.
A cut in its buying of longer-dated debt earlier this week had fanned worries
the BOJ may be moving to turn off its stimulus.
CANADIAN DOLLAR, MEXICAN PESO WEAK
Canada's dollar and Mexico's peso remained firmly in the doldrums due to worries
about the North American Free Trade Agreement which the two countries hold with
the United States.
Sources in Canada's government told Reuters on Wednesday that they were
increasingly convinced Donald Trump could announce he is quitting the pact.
Sources in Mexico then said it would also abandon ship if the U.S. did so.
The euro traded at $1.1945, nearly flat on the day, and holding above Tuesday's
low of $1.1916.
There was more upbeat data for the shared currency though. German economy grew
at the strongest rate in six years last year a preliminary estimate from the
country's statistics office showed, although it was slightly under some peoples'
forecasts.
Commodity markets meanwhile were taking something of a breather after a flying
start to the year.
Both Brent and U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) oil price futures were
hovering just off three-year highs at just under $70 and $64 a barrel, while
industrial metals dipped and gold ticked to $1,317.76 after spiking to nearly
four-month highs in the previous session.
"In Q1, the balance of risk to Brent lies to the downside, with prices
overheating, record net-length built into the futures market and fundamentals
set to weaken seasonally," BMI Research said in a note.
(Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein; Editing by Elaine Hardcastle)
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