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		Take Five: Testing times
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		 [March 05, 2021]  1/LITMUS 
		TEST 
 On February 25, as a mini-tantrum raged on 
		bond markets, the U.S. Treasury auctioned $62 billion in 7-year notes - 
		but investors, it would seem, forgot to show up. The lowest bid-cover 
		ratio of 2.04 on record sent 10-year Treasury yields rocketing to a 
		one-year high above 1.61%.
 
 The Fed signalling it is not perturbed by rising yields has markets 
		fretting again. Scheduled 10-year and 30-year Treasury bond sales on 
		Wednesday and Thursday will be what TD Securities dubs a "litmus test 
		for potential market dysfunction".
 
 The first aims to raise $38 billion, the second $24 billion. Another $58 
		billion of three-year notes are auctioned Tuesday.
 
 The Fed clearly believes any inflation rise is transitory and tighter 
		financial conditions so far don't warrant action. The outcome of the 
		auctions might well test its resolve.
 
 Graphic: U.S. yields and dollar -
		
		https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
 gfx/mkt/qmypmwzgkpr/US
 %20yields%20and%20USD.JPG
 
		
		 
		
 2/DON'T PUSH IT
 
 From Frankfurt to Rome and Madrid, government borrowing costs are up as 
		much 33 basis points this year so Thursday's European Central Bank 
		meeting will be a test of its ability to suppress bond yields.
 
 As higher yields risk derailing a fragile euro zone economy, markets 
		want action, or at least a commitment to step up bond buying via the 
		1.85 trillion-euro Pandemic Emergency Purchase Scheme. Not doing so 
		risks accelerating the selloff.
 
 Almost a year ago markets, already alarmed by COVID-19, took fright at 
		ECB President Christine Lagarde's off-the-cuff remark that the bank 
		wasn't there to "close spreads". Soaring yields forced the ECB to 
		respond with the PEPP.
 
 The anniversary is a reminder to the ECB: it never hurts to show markets 
		now and then not to push it too far.
 
 Graphic: Move in 10-year sovereign bond yields this year - https://graphics.reuters.com/GLOBAL-MARKETS/xegpbwrazvq/chart.png
 
 3/CHINA'S GREAT WITHDRAWAL
 
 Premier Li Keqiang kicked off the annual, week-long National People's 
		Congress (NPC) with his 2021 report, restoring China's annual economic 
		growth target set for above 6% this year.
 
 But the bigger question is how does Beijing withdraw pandemic stimulus 
		and avoid asset bubbles without upsetting the economy and twitchy 
		financial markets.
 
 Chinese stocks and government bonds sank this week after its top banking 
		regulator warned of bubbles overseas and rising lending rates.
 
		
		 
		
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			A trader works as a screen shows Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome 
			Powell's news conference after the U.S. Federal Reserve interest 
			rates announcement on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange 
			(NYSE) in New York, U.S., July 31, 2019. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File 
			Photo 
            
			 
Trade and money supply data due out will show just how uneven the economy still 
is and froth levels in the banking system. Markets will watch the NPC closely 
for clues ahead.
 Graphic: China TSF, GDP and markets Image -
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
 gfx/mkt/12/6912/6843/Pasted%20Image.jpg
 
 4/ARK AGROUND?
 
 After the slide in tech stocks, one fund that bears watching is Cathie Wood's 
$23 billion ARK Innovation fund which has fallen more than the market in recent 
days. Wood shot to prominence with outsized bets on companies such as Tesla and 
Square that surged during the pandemic. Lipper data shows she attracted $14.84 
billion in inflows over the past 12 months.
 
But tech companies are acutely sensitive to higher bond yields, leaving the ARK 
fund -- and others like it -- vulnerable to a performance hit and outflows. 
Wood's heavy exposure to illiquid stocks could turn out to an issue.
 Graphic: ARK Innovation's holdings hammered in Nasdaq drop - https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-STOCKS/ARK/nmopazgxdva/chart.png
 
 5/DARK HORSE EUROPE
 
 European and U.S. equity returns are running neck-and-neck in 2021 but after 
five years of underperformance, European stocks may have just enough tailwind to 
win the 2021 race.
 
 The old continent being light on tech, isn't on the front line of the bond 
selloff which has hit the rate-sensitive Nasdaq. In fact, for investors seeking 
to ride the reflation trade, Europe ticks a lot of boxes, being heavy with 
commodities, financials and other value stocks.
 
 
 U.S. 10-year Treasury yields around 1.5% match the S&P 500's dividend yield. 
Europe's risk-free equivalent, the German Bund, meanwhile pays -0.3%, nowhere 
near the 1.8% dividend yield on EURO STOXX.
 
 Analysts forecast European earnings growth to beat the U.S. every quarter in 
2021. So 43.8% versus 21.6% in Q1 and 79.1% versus 50.9% in Q2.
 
 Graphic: Earnings U.S. vs EU - 
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
 gfx/mkt/oakperklkvr/Pasted%20image%201614869057027.png
 
 (Reporting by Sujata Rao, Dhara Ranasinghe and Julien Ponthus in London; David 
Randall in New York and Andrew Galbraith in Shanghai; compiled by Sujata Rao and 
Karin Strohecker)
 
				 
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