Yields -Continue to slide on economic concerns
Brexit – May offers resignation in exchange for Brexit deal
EM currencies – Turkey measures have investors selling other EM currencies
Oil – Crude stockpiles rise
Gold – Slides on profit-taking
Bitcoin – Rises as volatility eases
Yields
Right now, bonds are driving the move with all asset classes. The concerns for the global growth are driving the flight to safety and bonds and safe-haven currencies are in demand. The yield on 10-year Treasuries fell to the lowest level since December 2017. Today, we saw a wrath of dovish talk from ECB and Fed speakers. Draghi and Praet reiterated accommodative stances are needed, while the Fed’s Kaplan noted that we would need to see a more pronounced yield curve inversion to consider a rate cut.
The key spread between the 10-year and 2-year Treasuries widened to 17.1 basis points, seven points wider than last Friday’s low of 9.9 basis points. The yield curve is still inverted for the 3-month/10-year yield spread. Global growth concerns will remain the key driver for risk aversion, but we could see that ease up if US-China trade talks deliver another positive step in the right direction.
Brexit
Its due or die time for PM May. She is going all in on her Brexit strategy and she is offering her resignation if she can get Tory support to push her deal through Parliament. Cable rose after reports that Boris Johnson and Iain Duncan Smith would support her deal.
It seems the choice is either May’s deal or a long extension. Either way, we will likely be seeing less of the PM in the near future. Several outcomes still exist on how Brexit will unfold, but tomorrow’s motions may provide further clarity on how we get there.
Emerging Market Currencies
The Turkish government is trying to stave off a currency crisis and preventing investors from selling the lira is likely to do more harm in the long run. Unable to properly hedge their positions, traders ended up shorting other emerging market currencies, such as the South African rand, Brazilian real and the South African rand. President Erdogan has not delivered an economic turnaround since the last year’s election and he could see his government lose many seats in local elections. The decision to restrict foreign banks to getting access to the lira until the elections are over will scare off investors going forward.
Oil
Crude’s recent rally was disrupted after the weekly EIA inventory data showed a strong rise with stockpiles. Today’s fall does not derail the short-term bullish argument that both the OPEC + production cuts and supply outages will outweigh the global growth concerns and rising US production. The month of May will be a critical moment for oil prices as the US will have to decide if they will continue waiving sanctions on Iranian crude. If we see West Texas Intermediate crude closer to $70 a barrel, the decision to hold off coming down on Iran will be an easy one.
Gold
Profit-taking and expectations for a stronger dollar kept the yellow metal from resuming its bullish trend. Gold failed to turn positive despite a wrath of dovish bets that the Fed may target more than a 25-basis point cut by the end of the year and further measures from the ECB that might alleviate the edge off its negative rate policy. Gold typically benefits when we see accommodative stances by the major central banks and if we do see global yields stabilize, we could that be supportive for higher commodity prices.
Bitcoin
Bitcoin recaptured the $4,000 level as volatility is poised to ease to the least volatile month on record. The digital currency has been battered over the past year and saw over $400 billion in market cap disappear. Price is approaching the upper boundaries of the recent range that has been in place for this year, but if volatility remains steady, we could see prices grind on higher. With falling demand for the adoption of digital assets, we would likely see the cryptocurrency struggle to make a move above the $5,000 level.
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