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		Bond yields resume rise, euro cheers Macron-Le Pen clash
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		 [April 21, 2022]  By 
		Marc Jones 
 LONDON (Reuters) - Bond yields resumed 
		their rise on Thursday as investor bet on aggressive global interest 
		rate hikes, while the euro climbed after a heated TV debate saw French 
		President Emmanuel Macron bolster his weekend re-election hopes.
 
 MSCI's main world stock market index barely mustered a move amid the 
		prospect of higher global borrowing costs, but Paris stocks scored a 
		1.1% jump after Wednesday evening's clash between Macron and far-right 
		rival Marine Le Pen.
 
 Although Le Pen came across as more polished and composed than in a TV 
		duel for the presidency in 2017, Macron needled her over her ties to 
		Russia's leadership, her plans for the economy and her policy for the 
		European Union.
 
 One poll showed 59% of viewers thought Macron had been the most 
		convincing in the nearly three-hour-long tussle, suggesting his 
		pre-debate 56%-44% lead in the race had at least been maintained ahead 
		of Sunday's runoff vote.
 
 "Yes, Emmanuel Macron won but his adversary has avoided a repeat of last 
		time's disaster," Gerard Araud, a former French ambassador said on 
		Twitter. "This debate doesn't disqualify her like the one in 2017, but 
		it doesn't help her close the gap either."
 
		
		 
		Investors were otherwise back to focusing on the war in Ukraine and how 
		fast interest rates will have to rise around the world as the conflict 
		with Russia adds to what were already intense global inflationary 
		pressures.
 Most 10-year bond yields across Europe rose sharply again, with 
		Germany's benchmark Bund yields heading back towards a seven-year peak 
		and Italy's hitting their highest since March 2020's initial COVID 
		panic.. [GVD/EUR]
 
 Markets are expecting at least another half-percentage-point rate hike 
		from the U.S. Federal Reserve next month while one European Central Bank 
		policymaker had said on Wednesday that it might start hiking euro zone 
		rates as early as July.
 
 Citi's Global Markets Strategist Matt King said that the pressure for 
		markets was also coming from quantitative tightening, or QT - the 
		process of years of frantic central bank money-printing going into 
		reverse.
 
 That process is just about to start and over the next year he estimates 
		it will see around half a trillion dollars being sucked out of the 
		global financial system by the U.S. Fed alone.
 
 "Don't look at the real yields, look at the liquidity flow," King said, 
		adding that a rough calculation was that $1 trillion of QT would knock 
		global stocks down by around 10%.
 
 "These flows are just too big for markets to anticipate ahead of time," 
		he said.
 
 (Graphic: Global assets year-to-date -
		
		https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
 gfx/mkt/dwpkrydlovm/Pasted%20image%201650532065834.png)
 
 SPILLOVERS
 
 Asia markets saw Chinese and Hong Kong stocks hit month lows overnight 
		and China's yuan also fell to its lowest in six months as Shanghai 
		authorities said tough COVID-19 restrictions would remain in place.
 
		Chinese blue chips shed 1.8% while Hong Kong stocks fell 2%, both 
		falling to their lowest level since mid-March. The spot yuan touched 
		6.4478 per dollar, its softest level since October. 
		
		 
		
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			A man wearing a protective mask, amid the coronavirus disease 
			(COVID-19) outbreak, walks past an electronic board displaying 
			Russian Trading System (RTS) Index, Japan's Nikkei index and the Dow 
			Jones Industrial Average outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan, 
			February 25, 2022. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon 
            
			 
The declines pulled MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan 
0.6% lower, despite gains in Korea and Australia, where the local benchmark rose 
0.4% to not far off a record peak. 
 Japan's Nikkei also jumped 1.2% as the yen hovered near its recent 20-year low. 
[/FRX]
 
 Analysts at Nomura said they were cutting their Q2 China GDP growth forecast to 
1.8% year-on-year from 3.4%, "owing to rapidly worsening high-frequency activity 
data in April, the rising number of cities under full and partial lockdowns, 
severe logistics disruptions, and signs that Beijing is unlikely to end its 
zero-Covid strategy soon."
 
A prolonged slowdown in China would have substantial global spillovers, 
International Monetary Fund Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva said on 
Thursday, while adding that Beijing has room to adjust policy to provide 
support.
 Deutsche Bank's chief economist David Folkerts-Landau meanwhile warned that a 
late-2023 U.S. recession was now a baseline scenario.
 
 "Prepare for a hard landing," he said, flagging the possibility of a Fed funds 
rate in the 4.5-5% range and euro zone rates at 2-2.5%.
 
 Deutsche Bank also noted that the extent of Fed hikes priced in by December had 
hit a fresh high of 227 bps. When added to the 25 bp hike from last month, that 
implies the Fed will tighten by more than 260 bps for the year as a whole - more 
than the 250 bps seen back in 1994.
 
Treasury 10-year yields had dived 11 basis points on Wednesday, but were back up 
to 2.874% in Europe. Nasdaq futures were also up over half a percent as upbeat 
Tesla earnings helped ease the stress of Netflix's brutal slump this week. [.N]
			 
 
The streaming company's losses now stand at 62% this year, making it the worst 
performer in the entire S&P 500 on a year-to-date basis.
 In the currency markets, the euro rose 0.6% to above $1.09 again and also 
chalked up gains versus the Japanese yen, Swiss franc and Norwegian crown. [/FRX]
 
 The dollar meanwhile gained 0.2% on the yen which has hit 20-year lows in recent 
days, hurt by the Bank of Japan promise to keep government bond yields there 
pinned down despite rises elsewhere around the world.
 
 "The euro is all about ECB drumbeat for a July hike," said Kenneth Broux, an FX 
strategist at Societe Generale in London.
 
 Oil meanwhile firmed in choppy commodity trading as concerns about supply due to 
a potential European Union ban on Russian oil came to the fore. Russian forces 
stepped up their attacks in eastern Ukraine on Thursday.
 
 Brent crude futures rose 1.54% to $108.44 a barrel, although European natural 
gas prices fell 1.2% 96.5 euros.
 
 (Additional reporting by Alun John in Hong Kong; Editing by Catherine Evans)
 
				 
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