Trade The News Weekly market update: Market Week
Wrap-up
- Global markets entered
liquidation mode this week as the European debt crisis seemed to morph into a
European banking crisis and the Fed launched 'Operation Twist,' to terrible
reviews. Equities, metals (precious and base), energy and key currencies racked
up steep losses heading into week's end as fears of the global economic slowdown
plus the Europe situation drove risk into the woodshed. The IMF issued its World
Economic Outlook, warning that Europe and the US could slip back into recession
in 2012 unless they dealt with problems that were threatening to infect the rest
of the world. A round of weak September European PMI data added to baseline risk
aversion, including China reporting another sub-50 reading in flash PMI. In its
policy decision on Wednesday, the FOMC altered its statement language to read
"there are significant downside risks to the economic outlook." The committee
also said it would extend the average maturity of securities held on the Fed
balance sheet by buying $400B in longer-dated securities and selling
shorter-dated notes. While the amount is greater than some observers had
expected, the response among analysts was still generally negative, with some
decrying the move as ineffectual, some saying it would destroy bank
profitability and other calling the move a poorly thought-out QE3. Adding to the
growing sense of uncertainty, a looming impasse over a six week stop gap funding
measure in the US Congress is again threatening a government shutdown. Global
equities saw a massive sell-off in Thursday's session as investors coped with
the Fed move, heard the growing consensus that Greece will default while
remaining inside the euro zone and threats and worried about the state of the
European banking system. For the week the DJIA lost 6.4%, the S&P500 dropped
6.6%, and the Nasdaq fell 5.3%.
- Ongoing policy skirmishes in Washington
were hard to ignore this week. On Monday, President Obama handed Congress a
$3.5T deficit reduction bill, including $1.5T in funds from his so-called
"Buffett Rule" to boost tax rates for those who earn more than $1M. The move
provoked howls of protest from the right, which branded the effort "class
warfare." The plan will be submitted to the Congressional debt reform super
committee, which is mandated to come up with at least $1.2T in budget cuts by
November 23rd. In Congress, a routine short-term government funding bill blew up
into a battle that could result in a government shutdown in October. With FEMA's
war chest running low after the disasters of recent months, the House GOP
leadership tried and then failed to pass the government bill that included much
less than the requested amount for FEMA and sought to pay for the funds by
cutting billions from a program to help car factories retool for building more
fuel-efficient vehicles. A total of 48 conservative Republicans defied the
leadership on the bill, saying it did not include enough spending cuts. A
slightly reconfigured bill passed the House thanks to some arm twisting,
although the Democratic-controlled Senate voted down the measure, setting
Congress up for more conflict next week.
- In equity news, US bank and
insurance stocks were slammed in the wake of the new Fed policy, as investors
forecasted that financial sector profits would be hurt by the flattening yield
curve. In addition, Moody's downgraded ratings on Bank of America, Citigroup and
Wells Fargo due to the decreased probability that the US government would
support the banks in the event of a crisis. FedEx only just topped expectations
in its Q1 report and trimmed its FY12 outlook slightly. FedEx's CEO said that
recession is not part of the forecast at the moment, although he does expect
sluggish growth. Homebuilders Lennar and KB Homes both reported Q3 results that
were much better than expected, and additionally both demonstrated healthy y/y
growth in their new order rates. Following Patriot Coal's move last week, two
more major coal producers cut production guidance. Alpha Natural Resources and
Walter Energy reduced their forecasts based on lower-than-expected output due to
negative events at their mines. Hewlett-Packard's board abruptly dumped CEO
Apotheker and named former eBay CEO Meg Whitman as the new chief.
- In
deal news, Tyco International - which was the focus of various takeover rumors
late last week - is moving to separate its businesses into three independent
publicly traded companies. The company plans to spin off three units to
shareholders, including the ADT North America residential security business, the
flow control products and the services and the fire and security business.
United Technologies said it would acquire Goodrich for $18.4B in cash, at
$127.50/shr. The deal helps UTX gain heft in new aircraft technology and plane
services. The company will issue about $4.6B in new shares to fund the deal and
cut its spending on share buybacks as it digests its biggest acquisition in a
decade.
- Government bond markets continued to make historic moves in
Europe and the United States. Tensions surrounding Greece and contagion effects
ratcheted up borrowing costs in Europe once again, leading to several reports
that in some cases lenders were choosing to pull out of the market all together.
Layered on top of deteriorating economic data and the Fed's decidedly
disconcerting statement on US growth prospects, safe haven flows sent both
yields to new historic lows. Operation Twist had the desired effect, flattening
the curve substantially by forcing buyers to the longer end. The US 30-year
yield decline by roughly 50 basis points on the week to finish at 2.85% while
the 10-year touched a new all time low at 1.7%. In terms of spreads, the US 10-2
year narrowed towards 150 basis points while the 30-10 year declined to 106 from
126 basis points on the week.
- Fears about a Greek default were stoked
by conference calls between Greece and IMF/ECB/EU troika officials on Monday and
Tuesday. Both sides discussed more measures Greece would need to take to secure
the next aid tranche. But the main focus in Europe this week moved on to the
delicate state of the continent's financial sector, where fluctuating bank
shares reflected investor worries that whatever happens in Athens, a European
bank crisis may be inevitable. Tension built on reports that more entities were
cutting exposure to European banks, especially after German industrial giant
Siemens pulled funds from a French bank and Chinese state banks appeared to
sever swap lines with several European counterparts (the Chinese claimed the
lines were "full"). On Thursday, reports that the EU was speeding up
recapitalization of the 16 mid-tier banks that came close to failing last
summer's EU stress tests made the rounds, and on Friday there were reports that
France was mulling a unilateral TARP-like program to aid its banks. Even US
banks were not immune: one speculative research report making the rounds
asserted that Morgan Stanley could have significant exposure to French banking
contagion, though it was quickly denied.
- EUR/USD continued the slide
seen last week as an endless stream of negative European news and contradictory
official rhetoric hammered the single currency. By Friday the technical picture
played a role in curbing euro declines as EUR/USD found Fibonacci support around
1.3410, which corresponded to a 50% retracement of the 1.1875 June 2010 low to
1.4939 May 2011 high. In addition, dealers said that there were hopes late in
the week that the annual gatherings of the IMF and the World Bank could provide
an opportunity to coordinate a fresh round of measures to stem the spread of the
crisis. The ECB continued to buy peripheral bonds for the sixth straight week,
although Spanish and Italian 10-year yields are higher than ever.
-
Sterling slumped after the most recent policy minutes indicated the BoE was
ready to provide more stimulus. The vote for QE was 8-1, and the contents of the
minutes painted a more dovish view among MPC members. The yen continued to
maintain a firm tone. USD/JPY lingered about 25 pips above fresh all-time lows,
EUR/JPY hit fresh 10-year highs and GBP/JPY reached all-time highs. With the end
of the Japanese fiscal half-year fast approaching, repatriation seems to be
generating JPY demand. There were rumors circulating mid-week that the Swiss
National Bank might raise the EUR/CHF floor from 1.20 to 1.25, sending EUR/CHF
from 1.2060 to test above 1.22 before retreating. Swiss officials would not
comment on the market rumors, although dealers said it would be in the SNB's
interest to keep investors guessing about where they intend to maintain the
floor.
- In Asia, the China flash manufacturing indicator from HSBC
echoed the largely disappointing PMI data in Europe, falling to 49.4 from 49.9
prior. Recall that last month marked the first increase in four months, raising
some speculation that the downturn in Chinese production has run its course.
Instead, this most recent print makes it a third consecutive month that China
HSBC PMI data is in sub-50 contraction territory.
- In New Zealand Q2 GDP
was also a disappointment, with 0.1% q/q increase coming well shy of 0.5%
consensus. The New Zealand dollar sold off sharply to a five-month low of
$0.7750 against dollar and also hit a one-week low against its slumping relative
AUD. The Reserve Bank of Australia September meeting minutes suggested the
markets are overestimating the bank's willingness to cut rates in the face of
global turmoil, hinting that it is too early to assess the extent of this
crisis. Later in the week, S&P revised the outlook for South Australia
region to negative from stable, but affirmed the AAA rating of the sovereign,
pointing to strong mining exports and private investment in the resources
sector.
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