Rout eases as China keeps yuan on a leash
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[August 06, 2019]
By Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - A rout in global markets
eased on Tuesday as China kept the yuan on a tight leash after its
landmark drop past 7 to the dollar led the United States to label
Beijing a currency manipulator.
The trade war between the world's top economies remained close to
boiling point, but the heat was reduced enough to steady some nerves
when China's central bank fixed the yuan at a slightly stronger rate
[.EU].
Asian markets held losses to between 0.75% and 1.5% overnight. Some
encouraging German data helped Europe gain. Futures were pointing to a
1% rebound after Wall Street suffered its heaviest fall of the year on
Monday.[.EU]
Safe-haven assets, including bonds, gold and currencies like the yen and
Swiss franc, settled down as investors moved tentatively back into the
euro, pound and some of emerging- market currencies.
The mood was still fragile, though.
"I think the tipping point for a more prolonged negative trend (for risk
assets) is quite close," said Hans Peterson, SEB Investment Management's
head of asset allocation, referring to the trade war escalation and
other risks such as Brexit.
"We have reduced both European and global equities. We still have a
small overweight in EM (emerging market) stocks but just a small one."
U.S. President Donald Trump and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said
on Monday that China was manipulating its currency, and that Washington
would engage the International Monetary Fund to clamp down on Beijing.
"Officially labeling China a currency manipulator gives the United
States a legitimate reason to take even more steps," said Norihiro
Fujito, senior investment strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley
Securities.
"The markets are now scrambling to factor in the possibility of the
United States imposing not only an additional 10% of tariffs on Chinese
imports, but the figure being raised to 25%.
Goldman Sachs also said it no longer expects a deal to be struck before
the November 2020 U.S. presidential election. Morgan Stanley said more
tit-for-tat tariffs could tip the world economy into recession by the
middle next year.
Though U.S. Treasury yields had edged back up to 1.74% from October 2016
lows of 1.672%, German yields stayed down at -0.54%. Markets are now
pricing in a 100% chance that the European Central Bank will cut its
already negative interest rates again next month. [ECBWATCH]
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A picture illustration shows a U.S. one dollar and Chinese 10 Yuan
bank notes, taken in Warsaw January 26, 2011. Picture taken January
26. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel (POLAND - Tags: BUSINESS)
YUAN TO WATCH
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan
<.MIAPJ0000PUS> had ended down 0.75% after brushing its lowest since
January. It has lost 3.7% so far this week.
The Shanghai Composite Index <.SSEC> retreated 1.4%, while Japan's
Nikkei <.N225> shed 0.7%. Australian stocks <.AXJO> fell 2.4% after
metals prices fell and Australia's central bank resisted cutting
interest rates again.
China's offshore yuan had stretched the previous day's slide,
briefly weakening to 7.1382 <CNH=D4>, the lowest since international
trading in the Chinese currency began in 2010. But it pulled back to
7.0469 after Beijing's firmer-than-expected fixing on Tuesday.
The Japanese yen, a perceived safe-haven in times of market turmoil
and political tensions, touched a seven-month high of 105.520 per
dollar <JPY=> before dropping back as far as 106.700 in volatile
trade. [/FRX]
The Swiss franc, another currency sought in times of turmoil, has
gained roughly 1% against the dollar this week. It set a six-week
peak of 0.9700 franc per dollar <CHF=>.
Japan's 10-year bond yield <JP10YTN=JBTC> fell to a three-year
trough of minus 0.215%.
Brent crude oil futures <LCOc1> steadied after dropping to near a
seven-month low of $59.07 per barrel as the trade war raised concern
about lower demand for commodities. Brent last traded at $59.85 for
a modest gain. [O/R]
Spot gold <XAU=> stalled after advancing to a six-year peak of
$1,474.80 an ounce as investors sought safety.
"People are just rebalancing their portfolios in favor of bonds,
gold, Japanese yen, Swiss francs and the usual safe havens," said SP
Angel analyst Sergey Raevskiy.
(Additional reporting by Shinichi Saoshiro in Tokyo and K. Sathya
Narayanan in Bengaluru; sditing by Larry King)
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