Take Five: Bulls charge past hurdles
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[June 05, 2020]
(Reuters) -1/CROUCHING TIGER
Have HSBC and Standard Chartered "chosen profits over human rights" in
backing China's national security law for Hong Kong, as some suggest? Or
does it reflect the tightrope businesses must navigate between Hong
Kong's protesters and Beijing?
U.S. special treatment for Hong Kong is now in doubt as is the city's
role as a finance hub. Its position as a major goods trading centre will
be threatened if wares become subject to the higher import tariffs paid
in mainland China or if U.S. imports no longer enjoy zero rates.
One silver lining may be more IPOs by Chinese firms ditching their New
York listings or mainland newcomers debuting in Hong Kong rather than on
Nasdaq.
But as Beijing tightens its grip, an American Chamber of Commerce survey
showed 30% of respondents were considering moving capital, assets or
business operations. Heed Western warnings or stick with Beijing? It's a
choice more companies will have to make.
(Graphic: Hong Kong trade with US, China,
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2/STOCK RALLY, YIELDS UP
The U.S. Fed might be watching the steepening Treasury yield curve with
trepidation. The steepening -- when longer-dated yields rise faster than
short-tenor ones -- signals a brighter growth outlook. But too fast a
rise in borrowing costs can strangle economic recovery.
After the June 9-10 FOMC meeting, investors will listen for the Fed's
views on the economic outlook; an upbeat tone could further feed the
stocks rally and trigger Treasury selling.
That may train more attention on the curve; the 5-year/30-year segment
is at the steepest since end-2017, rising around 30 bps in the past
month. Few expect Fed action this month but it may well signal
additional bond-buying or yield curve control measures ahead
(Graphic: U.S. stocks and bond yields,
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Pasted%20image%201591293577915.png)
2/TIME FOR EURO BULLS
If nine straight days of gains for the euro and the tightest
Italy/Germany bond spreads in over two months are anything to go by,
investors are a whole lot more confident in the euro zone outlook
compared with a few weeks ago.
After an initial slow and divided response by politicians and an
unfortunate comment on bond spreads from the ECB chief, European
authorities suddenly found their feet -- a recovery fund with some form
of fiscal burden sharing is taking shape, Germany has agreed more fiscal
spending and the ECB has added 600 billion euros to its emergency
stimulus.
Further euro gains and tighter bond spreads appear likely, as does a
selloff in German bonds as demand for safe havens wanes. The road ahead
is long, no doubt. Yet for the first time in years, euro bulls have
reason to hope.
[to top of second column] |
Traders wear masks as they work on the floor of the New York Stock
Exchange as the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
continues in the Manhattan borough of New York, U.S., May 28, 2020.
REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
(Graphic: A turning point for European markets?,
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/mkt/jznvnbnqgvl/theme0506.png)
4/THE RECKONING
Who's buying? That's the question being asked of China's factories whose output
is back to levels seen before the coronavirus crisis shunted or shut down most
of the global manufacturing supply chain.
Sunday's trade data should confirm that global demand for stuff being cranked
out by the world's biggest factory remains weak. But any rise in imports, if
driven by cheaper oil or raw material purchases, would feed fears of an
inventory build-up and worries that manufacturers have been politically
pressured to produce.
The coming days might be when investors begin suspecting China will not have any
growth this year. That will lead them to gauge how bullish stock markets will
react as the unstoppable force of Chinese production runs into an impregnable
global downturn.
(Graphic: China's external trade,
https://fingfx.
thomsonreuters.com/
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Pasted%20image%201591341346298.png)
5/DRY POWDER
By denting boardroom confidence and ravaging balance sheets, the coronavirus
crisis brought a multi-year deal-making boom to a halt; Global M&A activity has
plunged 43% this year while global private equity buyouts are down 27%,
Refinitiv data shows.
But European M&A activity is bucking the trend with a 12% rise, thanks to some
mega-deals such as a 24 billion-pound merger of mobile operators O2 and Virgin
Media.
True, the number of announced transactions is 33% below year-ago levels, but
bankers see this changing as private equity funds sniff around for troubled
businesses in need of cash injections or for resilient listed firms.
A consortium of KKR, Cinven and Providence has just launched a 2.96 billion-euro
bid for Spanish telecoms operator MasMovil -- Europe's first take-private
attempt since the crisis struck. CVC Capital Partners is in talks with Italy's
Serie A to invest up to 2.2 billion euros into the soccer league's broadcasting
rights business, sources say.
Expect more deals if market confidence continues to build.
(Graphic: European stocks recover,
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/buzz/bdwvkdlbzpm/Pasted%20image%201591349690797.png)
(Reporting by Sujata Rao, Dhara Ranasinghe and Pamela Barbaglia in London; Vidya
Ranganathan in Singapore and Saqib Iqbal Ahmed in New York; Editing by Toby
Chopra)
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