Marketmind: In pursuit of Pelosi's plane
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[August 02, 2022] A
look at the day ahead in markets from Anshuman Daga
Just as markets seemed to factor in a less hawkish Federal Reserve and
relief for economies and businesses, politics is playing spoilsport.
Tensions have flared up with the U.S. House of Representatives Speaker
Nancy Pelosi preparing to arrive in Taiwan on Tuesday, as part of her
Asia tour.
The United States says it won't be intimidated by Chinese threats to
never "sit idly by" if Pelosi makes the trip to the self-ruled island
claimed by Beijing.
The White House - which would not confirm the trip - said she had the
right to go. But China has repeatedly warned against a visit by Pelosi.
The relationship between the world's two biggest economies hasn't been
smooth and analysts see the visit by Pelosi, a long-time critic of
China, as unsettling for markets.
Rising risk aversion has forced Chinese stocks to drop by the most in
three months and the Taiwan dollar is at its lowest level in more than
two years.
The nervousness is most evident in U.S. Treasuries, with yields on the
10-year Treasuries falling up to 9 basis points to 2.5160%, a four-month
low, and retreating from an 11-year high of 3.4980% struck in mid-June.
The fragile market undertone follows weak economic data.
Surveys on Monday showed that factories across the United States, Europe
and Asia struggled for momentum last month on sluggish global demand and
China's strict COVID-19 restrictions.
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A man reads the Global Times newspaper that features a front page
article about U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi's
Asia tour at a street display wall in Beijing, China, August 1,
2022. The front page headline reads: "Pelosi visits Asia in the
smell of gunpowder." REUTERS/Thomas Peter
That sent oil prices to the lowest in two weeks while gold bulls pushed up
prices of the yellow metal to four-week highs.
European stock futures indicated a weak start on Tuesday.
In Europe, German retail sales posted the biggest year-on-year slump since 1994
on Monday, with a 8.8% fall in real terms.
Down Under, investors were bit relieved after Australia's central bank raised
its cash rate by 50 basis points as expected but tempered guidance on further
hikes ahead as it wrestles with rising inflation and a slowing economy.
Key developments that should provide more direction to markets on Tuesday:
Australia's central bank raises rates:
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago President Charles Evans talks on the economy and
monetary policy
Major earnings: BP, Generali, DuPont, Caterpillar, Starbucks
(Reporting by Anshuman Daga; Editing by Vidya Ranganathan)
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