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		'Super Mario' shock: euro slides, yields hit new lows
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		 [June 18, 2019]  By 
		Thyagaraju Adinarayan 
 LONDON (Reuters) - The euro took a beating 
		and German bond yields hit a fresh record low on Tuesday in reaction to 
		European Central Bank President Mario Draghi's comments indicating a 
		possibility of new rate cuts or asset purchases.
 
 Draghi said the ECB would need to ease policy again, if inflation did 
		not head back to its targets, and that there was still "considerable 
		headroom" to do so. Inflation in the euro zone slowed to 1.2% in May, 
		the lowest in more than a year.
 
 German government bond yields, the benchmark for Europe, fell to -0.30% 
		for the first time ever and the euro slumped to a two-week low versus 
		the dollar, while European stocks shook off early weaknesses to trade 
		0.9% higher.
 
 "From the market reaction, we are increasingly learning that when a 
		central bank's senior leaders vindicate expectations, market shifts 
		extend. The same thing happened when the Fed confirmed its dovish shift 
		earlier this year," said Themos Fiotakis, head of FX and rates strategy 
		at UBS.
 
		 
		
 (Graphic: Draghi sends Bund yield to new record low - https://tmsnrt.rs/2XXH7Rc)
 
 Draghi, nicknamed "Super Mario", looks set to end his eight-year term 
		this year without having ever executed a rate rise.
 
 The ECB's signals came a day ahead of a widely anticipated U.S. Federal 
		Reserve policy decision, where expectations were running high that 
		Draghi's counterpart Jerome Powell would probably lay the groundwork for 
		a rate cut later this year.
 
 "In just a few months, the market has turned from being guided by the 
		Fed to actively guiding the Fed," interest rate strategists at Bank of 
		America Merrill Lynch wrote.
 
 The U.S. central bank is likely to leave borrowing costs unchanged, but 
		markets are almost fully pricing in a 25-basis-point rate cut for July.
 
 The meeting will also provide the most direct insight yet into how 
		deeply policymakers have been influenced by the U.S.-China trade war. 
		[FED/DIARY]
 
 Rate cut hopes, fueled by Draghi's dovish speech, led the U.S. treasury 
		yield to the lowest since September 2017.
 
 Uncertainty over the trade war has sent investors storming toward U.S. 
		Treasuries, a Bank of America Merrill Lynch's fund manager survey 
		showed. Treasuries were the "most crowded" trade for the first time in 
		its survey.
 
		 
		(Graphic: U.S. interest rates - https://tmsnrt.rs/2Iogak7)
 The impact of U.S. restrictions on exports to China is already 
		resonating in Europe with German silicon wafer maker Siltronic warning 
		that the spat would hit its sales and profitability.
 
		
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			Mario Draghi, President of the European Central Bank (ECB), attends 
			a news conference in Vilnius, Lithuania June 6, 2019. REUTERS/Ints 
			Kalnins 
            
			 
The warning knocked European technology stocks, but a sharp reversal in the euro 
and rate cut signals offset the weakness driving the pan-European STOXX index 
0.9% higher as of 1031 GMT.
 In another blow to the German economy, which is expected to grow by just 0.5% in 
2019, a survey by ZEW institute showed the mood among German investors 
deteriorated sharply in June due to recent weak economic data and the escalating 
U.S.-China trade dispute.
 
 In Asia, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan edged up 
0.6%, while Japan's Nikkei dipped 0.7%. MSCI's gauge of stocks across the globe 
rose 0.15%, boosted by Europe.
 
"Markets have been very tentative over the last few sessions, trading largely 
sideways...Oil dropping and gold rising is also an ominous sign," said John 
Woolfitt at Atlantic Markets.
 Crude oil slipped a further 0.8% on Tuesday on global growth worries, although 
losses were capped by tensions in the Middle East after last week's tanker 
attacks. [O/R]
 
 Acting U.S. Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan announced on Monday the 
deployment of about 1,000 more troops to the Middle East for what he said were 
defensive purposes, citing concerns about a threat from Iran.
 
 The dollar index, tracking the greenback against six major peers, is holding 
tight at two week highs.
 
 
 The Australian dollar fell to a fresh five-month low of $0.6830 after minutes 
from the Reserve Bank of Australia's June meeting showed policymakers thought it 
might have to ease again to push down unemployment and revive wages and 
inflation.
 
 The central bank cut rates to a record low of 1.25% earlier this month to 
support the slowing economy.
 
 Meanwhile, sterling steadied after hitting 5-1/2 month lows as traders waited 
for news on the contest for the leadership of the ruling Conservative party.
 
 "The fact that Boris Johnson will most likely become the new prime minister 
hangs like a sword of Damocles over the trend of the pound. With this in mind, 
investors are currently rather reluctant to place too much trust in the 
currency," said Marc-André Fongern, a strategist at MAF Global Forex in 
Frankfurt.
 
 In the developing world, stocks were set to snap a four-day losing run on 
Tuesday, while emerging markets currencies edged firmer against the dollar as 
cautious optimism crept into markets ahead of the Fed meeting.
 
 (Reporting by Thyagaraju Adinarayan in London; Editing by Mark Heinrich)
 
				 
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