Bond market storm eases a touch but bears still on prowl
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[June 14, 2022] By
Sujata Rao and Scott Murdoch
LONDON/HONG KONG (Reuters) - World shares
inched higher and Wall Street was tipped for a stronger open on Tuesday,
as U.S. Treasury yields steadied at multi-year highs following the worst
selloff in years.
Monday's selloff confirmed a so-called bear market for the U.S. S&P 500
equity index, which is down more than 20% from its most recent closing
high, on fears central banks may have to up the pace of
policy-tightening to curb soaring inflation.
Those expectations took U.S. 10-year borrowing costs, the benchmark
interest rate for the global economy, as high as 3.44% on Monday, a 2011
peak.
While yields slipped on Tuesday to around 3.3% they remain 180 basis
points (bps) higher than at end-2021.
With the Federal Reserve due to start a two-day meeting later on
Tuesday, markets waited to see if it raises rates by 75 bps, instead of
the 50 bps originally anticipated.
Several investment banks, including Goldman Sachs, now flag that
possibility which is almost fully priced in for Wednesday and would be
the biggest increase since 1994.
Traders have also upped bets on how high interest rates might rise,
seeing them peaking around 4% next year, versus the earlier 3%
expectation.
That repricing has pummelled assets which benefited from rock-bottom
interest rates -- stocks, crypto, junk-rated bonds and emerging markets.
"Quite simply, when we see monetary tightening the order of what we are
seeing globally, something is going to break," said Timothy Graf, head
of EMEA macro strategy at State Street.
"Stock markets are reflecting the reality of the first-order effect of
tighter financial conditions," Graf said, predicting that with U.S.
stock valuations still above COVID-time lows, there was more pain to
come.
"I think there are other shoes to drop," he added.
MSCI's index of global shares flatlined after Monday's 3.7% fall, as did
a pan-European equity index. But pressure was building again on Wall
Street, with S&P 500 and Nasdaq futures up around 1%, ceding some
earlier bigger gains.
Asian shares earlier fell 1%, catching up with Monday's bleak Wall
Street session where the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq indexes lost 4% and 4.7%
respectively.
There was little let up for crypto markets, where bitcoin and ether
plumbed new 18-month lows, reacting to interest rate expectations and
crypto lender Celsius Network's decision to freeze withdrawals.
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A screen displays the Dow Jones Industrial Average after the closing
bell on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York
City, U.S., June 13, 2022. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Bitcoin fell to as low as $20,816, and is now down over 50% year to date and 28%
since Friday.
The latest selloff on world markets was triggered on Friday by U.S. data showing
annual inflation to May shot up by 8.6%.
The ensuing bond selloff lifted two-year U.S. yields more than 50 basis points
over two sessions, pushing it above 10-year borrowing costs on Monday in the
so-called curve inversion seen as a harbinger of economic recession.
Two-year yields eased to 3.26% on Tuesday, versus its 3.43% peak, its highest
since 2007.
Recent days has also seen renewed a stampede for the dollar, taking it to new
20-year peaks against a basket of currencies.
It eased 0.4% on Tuesday, offering respite to other currencies, including the
euro which rose 0.7%.
In particular focus, is the dollar-yen rate, with the former near 24-year highs
against the Japanese currency.
With the Bank of Japan expanding bond purchases on Tuesday and not expected to
budge from ultra-low rates policy at its Friday meeting, few expect yen respite.
"Given Wednesday may see the Fed go 75 bps and flag more, while the BOJ on
Friday will only flag more bond-buying, the yen is not going to stay at these
levels for long. It's going to get much, much worse," Rabobank strategist
Michael Every said.
Recession fears failed to dampen oil prices, however. Brent futures rose above
$123 a barrel as the tight supply picture highlighted future inflation risks.
"Commodities prices are set on the global market, and prices are rising for
countries close and far. Cost-push inflation is not transitory anymore," Agnès
Belaisch, chief European strategist at the Barings Investment Institute told
clients.
(Reporting by Sujata Rao; additional reporting by Scott Murdoch and Alun John in
Hong Kong; Editing by David Evans)
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