Take Five: Be careful out there! World markets themes
for the week ahead
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[January 05, 2019]
(Reuters) - Following are five big themes
likely to dominate thinking of investors and traders in the coming week
and the Reuters stories related to them.
1/ GROWING PESSIMISM
If you wanted evidence that the U.S. economy could be rolling over, the
surprise miss on the Institute for Supply Management's closely watched
manufacturing index was it. Wall Street and Treasury yields slumped
after the ISM index turned in its largest drop since the financial
crisis in 2008, and investors now bet that the Fed is more likely to cut
rates this year than raise them.
But manufacturing isn't the big weight in the U.S. economy it used to
be. Services now account for roughly 80 percent of economic activity,
and investors will be watching closely on Monday to see if ISM's
barometer of that key sector delivers solace or more pain. It is
expected to dip modestly to a reading of 59.7 from 60.7 in November (a
reading above 50 indicates activity is growing), but the risk is that it
turns in a downside surprise like the manufacturing index.
2/ FLASH CRASH
With the brewing China-U.S. trade war biting into global growth already
and liquidity tightening around the world, 2019 was always going to be a
stressful year. But nobody expected it to start with a currency market
"flash crash" that briefly pushed dollar/yen below 105.00. The move was
attributed to automatic sell triggers in thin markets, but it would have
fully reversed by now if investors saw no fundamental justification to
it. Poor manufacturing surveys in Asia, Europe and the United States and
a sales warning from Apple might go a long way in explaining the move.
The yen's strength is a red flag for world markets, but a massive
domestic problem as well. It hurts Japanese exports and the Bank of
Japan, which only months ago looked keen to normalize policy, may see it
as a risk to its decades-long efforts to create inflation. Indeed, on
their first day back to work, BOJ governor Haruhiko Kuroda echoed ECB
chief Mario Draghi's "whatever it takes" comment and top FX diplomat
Masatsugu Asakawa reminded FX traders of past G7 and G20 coordination on
intervention. Such reminders may get louder in the coming days and
weeks.
3/ BACK TO SCHOOL, 5-DAY RULE
There's no denying it: it's been a rocky start to the year for world
markets. Just how rocky the ride is for the rest of 2019 remains to be
seen, of course, but it might be worth keeping an eye on one of
investors' quirky market guidelines for clues: the so-called "S&P
Five-Day Rule".
It's a "rule" often touted by ex-Goldman bigwig Jim O'Neill, and goes
like this: when the S&P 500 rises in the first five trading days of the
year, the market turns in a positive annual performance. O'Neill puts
the success rate of this rule of thumb since 1950 at more than 85
percent. According to the Stock Trader's Almanac, as the S&P 500 goes
over the full month of January, so goes the full calendar year. In the
last 70 years there have been 10 major errors: 1966, 1968, 1982, 2001,
2003, 2009, 2010, 2015, and of course 2018.
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A trader looks at price monitors as he works on the floor at the New
York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, New York, U.S., January
3, 2019. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
The S&P 500 usually goes up. In the last 91 years the index has risen in 62 of
them and fallen in 29 of them. At the time of writing, after only two full
trading days of 2019, the index is down 2.35 percent. Plenty of time for a
turnaround, but sentiment is most definitely bearish.
4/CHIP WRECK
It was a rotten week for Apple after boss Tim Cook warned that China's economic
slowdown has caught the company off guard and trade tensions between Washington
and Beijing were starting to hurt consumer spending on smartphones in the
world's 2nd largest economy.
Cook's bombshell fueled worries that Apple's relatively pricey smartphones may
be falling out of favor in China, where rivals such as Huawei offer cheaper
options. Apple shares tumbled 10 percent on Thursday - a remarkable fall for one
of the world's most valuable and liquid stocks - resulting in the S&P Technology
index's worst day since August 2011.
It deepened the recent equities rout and cemented the increasingly gloomy
picture for corporate earnings, the early indications of which will become
clearer in the upcoming earnings season that kicks off later this month.
Analysts' outlook is already pretty bleak: estimated earnings growth for world
technology stocks 12 months ahead is just 5.6 percent, its lowest since April
2009.
5/ WILL THEY, WON'T THEY?
The start of the year is normally a busy time for sovereign debt issuers,
especially developing nations. Emerging market debt has risen steadily in recent
years, and pay-back time is approaching: over $4 trillion of EM debt matures by
the end of 2020, of which around a third is denominated in foreign currency,
according to the Institute of International Finance.
But it might be different this year. Worries over global growth are deepening
and sending tremors through world markets, dampening investors' appetite for
riskier assets and making it harder and more expensive for EM issuers to roll
over debt and borrow.
Analysts at Citi expect EM spreads to continue widening due to "increased
anxiety about the end of the economic cycle in the U.S., uncertainty about
damage caused by the Fed's tightening, and a lack of clarity regarding China-U.S.
trade disputes". It's shaping up to be a quieter start to the year as
governments weigh their options and wait on the sidelines for an opportune
moment. Yet some are still planning to make an appearance: Israel will start its
investor roadshow in Europe on Monday.
(Reporting by Dan Burns in New York and Marius Zaharia in Hong Kong; Josephine
Mason, Karin Stroheker and Jamie McGeever in London; Compiled by Jamie McGeever;
Editing by Gareth Jones)
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