Marketmind: China, COVID and Crude
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[November 28, 2022] A
look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike Dolan.
Rare anti-government unrest across China's cities over the weekend has
unnerved world markets, weakening crude oil prices and adding fresh
political risks to a fragile year-end.
As demonstrations over strict COVID-19 curbs flared across the country
over the weekend and infections climbed, protesters made a show of civil
disobedience unprecedented since leader Xi Jinping assumed power a
decade ago.
Wary that both the unrest and the COVID crunch compound the economic hit
to China and the world, the initial market reaction on Monday was to
sell Chinese stocks, the yuan and oil - with crude oil prices falling to
close to $80 per barrel, their lowest since January. Other Asia bourses
weakened in tandem.
A U.S. regulatory clampdown on Chinese tech giants, citing national
security concerns, also weighed on shares of tech firms.
And developments on the street meant little solace was taken from
Friday's central bank decision to cut banks' required reserve ratios,
even though this and the prospect of further easing added pressure to
the Chinese currency.
European stocks and U.S. futures fell too on Monday. Broad dollar gains
reversed quickly, however, as 10-year U.S. Treasury yields skidded to
their lowest in almost two months.
The recession signal from the U.S. yield curve between 3 months and 10
years inverted further to almost 70 basis points - its most negative in
almost 22 years.
Financial markets have for weeks looked positively at even the vaguest
hint of China's curbs easing - with many asset managers still assuming
the restrictions will eventually lift by the end of the first quarter of
2023.
This now may seem harder to parse.
Whether the widening unrest creates a new level of unpredictable
political risk in China or merely accelerates some government exit from
the draconian 'zero COVID' strategy - or even a U-turn on buying foreign
vaccines - remains unclear.
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A woman gets tested for COVID-19 on a
street, amid new lockdown measures in parts of the city to curb the
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Shanghai, China July 11,
2022. REUTERS/Aly Song/File Photo
As U.S. markets return after the Thanksgiving weekend, attention
will return to Federal Reserve tightening, the labour market and
inflation picture. Fed Chair Jerome Powell speaks on Wednesday, with
the November U.S. jobs report out on Friday.
A bear market rally in equities may continue into next year before
relapsing as a recession in the world economy takes hold, Deutsche
Bank said in its 2023 economic outlook published on Monday. The
German banking giant said it expected U.S. output to drop 2% over
the whole year, euro zone output to decline 1% and world economic
growth to slow to a recessionary 2%.
It also sees the euro/dollar exchange rate rising steadily to $1.10
by the end of 2023, 10-year Treasury yields staying constant at
3.65%, Brent crude falling to $80 per barrel and credit spreads
widening.
Developments that may provide direction to U.S. markets later on
Monday:
* Dallas Fed Nov manfacturing index; New York Federal Reserve
President John Williams speaks
* European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde at European
Parliament. ECB board member Elizabeth McCaul speaks in London
* UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak speaks at Lord Mayor's Banquet
(By Mike Dolan, editing by Barbara Lewis mike.dolan@thomsonreuters.com.
Twitter: @reutersMikeD)
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