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US auctions off $38 billion of 3 year notes at 1.632%

That is below the WI level of 1.634%

  • high yield of 1.632%. That is below the WI of 1.634%
  • bid to cover 2.56x vs six-month average of 2.48x
  • Directs 23.8% vs six-month average of 16.8%
  • Indirects 49.1% vs six-month average of 49.5%
  • Dealers take 27.1% versus six-month average of 33.7%
Overall, decent demand. The yield stopped through the WI level by a touch. The bid to cover was higher than the six-month average. Dealers took down a relatively small amount suggesting decent demand.

Sources: China purchases 5 cargos of soybeans from the US

About 300,000 tonnes

Sources are saying that China has purchase 5 cargoes of soybeans from the US. That is about 300,000 tonnes.  That is above an earlier report of two cargoes or 120,000 tonnes.
There are also unconfirmed reports that China is preparing for the December 15 tariffs to be enacted.

European shares end the session lower

US shares move back into the negative as well

The major European markets are now closed and are closing lower on the day.
The provisional closes are showing:
  • German DAX, -0.45%
  • France’s CAC, -0.58%
  • UK’s FTSE 100, -0.13%
  • Spain’s Ibex, -0.27%
  • Italy’s FTSE MIB, -0.97%
In the European debt market, the benchmark 10 year yields are also trading lower today led by a -7.2 basis point decline in the Italian issue.
US shares move back into the negative as well_
In other markets, US stocks are back in the red after a run higher into positive territory ran on steam:
  • S&P index, -0.05%
  • NASDAQ index, -0.05%
  • Dow industrial average, -0.22%
In the US debt market, US yields are now mixed with the 2 year up 1.0 basis point and the 10 year down -1.4 basis points.
US yields are mixed

Former Fed chairman Paul Volcker dies at 92

The man who conquered inflation dies

The man who conquered inflation dies
Paul Volcker has died of cancer at 92, the New York Times reports.
Volcker led the Fed from 1979-1987 in a particularly difficult time characterized by runaway inflation and currency instability. He began working at the Treasury Department under JFK and was chairman of Obama’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board.
Late in his life he was known for the ‘Volcker rule’; a measure that prohibited banks from making risky trades with their own funds, something that contributed to the financial crisis and bank bailout of 2008.
However his defining legacy was tackling the persistent and runaway inflation of the 1970s and 1980s by raising interest rates as high as 20.0% in 1980. That triggered a recession the next year but ended the era of double digit inflation and kicked off the great moderation — a +30 year period of generally falling borrowing costs and interest rates.

Global financial markets affected due to ongoing US-China turmoil

The US-China trade war drags on

Where the economies of US and China go, the rest of the world economies follow. Why is that? Well, around 40% of the world’s GDP comes from the combined economies of the US and China.

Take a look at the chart below from the World Economic Forum and you will see how a large proportion of the world’s $80 trillion GDP is made up by the US and China’s economies.
CMS 2

So, the market’s concern with the ongoing US-China trade dispute is really an ongoing concern about global growth. That is why a fall out between the US and China impact global financial markets.

The market wants the US-China trade dispute resolved as soon as possible. The markets have become used to a game of ‘ping-pong’ where some news prompts optimism about a US-China trade deal and then some other, conflicting news, encourages pessimism about the US-China trade deal. It’s truly a game of geo-political ping pong!

At the moment the market is digesting the latest news on Tuesday last week where US President Trump announced that it is probably better to wait until after the 2020 presidential election for a China deal and that there is no timeline on trade.

Then, on Wednesday, some sources quoted by Bloomberg said that a deal was much closer than the recent heated dialogue would otherwise indicate. Another game of ping pong! However, it is worth being aware that the US-China trade dispute could actually get much worse.

Two of the ways it could deteriorate would be if the US goes ahead with restricting US capital flows into China and if the impact of the Hong Kong riots spill over to further political moves from the US or China.

The impact of proposals to restrict US capital flows into China
One of the moves the US has suggested at the end of September this year in the ongoing trade war is a restriction of US capital flows into China. To literally turn off the tap of US capital.  The impact of such restrictions could be:

  • A drag on Chinese firms listed on global stock exchanges. Chinese companies listed on the US stock exchanges have a market capitalization of $1.3 trillion and include names like Alibaba and Beijing Capital Airport ADR.
  • China may retaliate to the US restrictions and sell off some if it’s $1.2 trillion dollars of US debt. This would cause US bond prices to fall and yields to spike as an alarm response. This in turn would make it costlier for US companies and consumers to borrow. A complete selling of US debt would be enormously risky for China as they are the largest foreign creditors of debt.
  • There is a danger of a decoupling between the US and Chinese economies and that would cause a far greater impact than the tariffs already in place have.
 
Hong Kong turmoil adds to tensions
The relationship between Hong Kong and China is tense. There is a ‘one country, two system’s’ policy between Hong Kong and mainland china, but the relationship is under strain. The catalyst for the strain has been Hong Kong protests over a proposed Chinese law to allow the extradition of criminal suspects to mainland China.

This has been the source of all the problems and riots that have been taking place recently. To make matter worse, at the end of November, President Trump signed new human rights legislation authorising sanctions on Chinese and Hong King officials responsible for human rights abuses in Hong Kong.

In this way the US are signaling support for pro-democracy activists. China responded to this legislation by calling it an illegal interference in its own affairs. The current expectations are that this in itself is not enough to de-rail US-China trade talks and Donald Trump.

However, it is an added tension in an already difficult relationship. President Trump has tried to avoid antagonising the situation by signing the bill in private and not having a large press conference.

What happens to global financial markets when the trade war drags on?
However, there are certain predictable responses that the market makes when it is concerned. These moves are called ‘risk off’ moves. In a risk off market we typically see gold strength, JPY and CHF strength, US oil weakness, bonds bid, AUD, JPY, and equity weakness.
Gold
A US-China trade war will make gold an attractive asset to buy. A world with central banks having low interest rates and risk being elevated makes gold a decent potential for investors seeking alpha. Also, with the month of January being an excellent time for gold, over the last decade, a breakdown in US-China trade relations would further encourage gold bulls.
Yen

The Japanese Yen is a traditional safe haven currency. Negative interest rates, like the Bank of Japan currently has, would typically discourage currency capital inflows. However, the debt structuring of Japan means that the currency is considered very stable and safe for uncertain times. As a result, when investors and speculators are fearful, there are sudden and marked inflows into the Japanese Yen.

The pair that stands out for particular downside in a fresh round of the ongoing US-China trade war would be the AUD/JPY pair. As around 30% of Australia’s economy is made up of trade with China it stands to lose out on a US-China trade war. Further trade strain would result in AUD weakness and JPY strength on safe haven flows.

A quick glance at the key risk events in markets this week

It is going to be an eventful week in markets despite the slower start today

Let us take a look at what else is on the agenda:

Tuesday, 10 December
– RBA governor Philip Lowe speaks at the AusPayNet Summit in Sydney
– China November CPI data
– Germany December ZEW survey current conditions, expectations
Wednesday, 11 December
– US November CPI data
– FOMC December monetary policy meeting & Fed chair Powell press conference
Thursday, 12 December
– UK general election
– SNB December monetary policy meeting
– ECB December monetary policy meeting & ECB president Lagarde press conference
– BOC governor Stephen Poloz speaks about the Canadian economic outlook for 2020
Friday, 13 December
– US November retail sales data
Sunday, 15 December
– Deadline before US tariffs on $156 billion of Chinese goods go into effect
These will be the key ones to pay attention to but there will also be other smaller data releases during the week that will also have some say to the ebb and flow of things.
As such, fret not about the lack of meaningful moves in markets so far today. Things will surely heat up over the next few days.

North Korea warns that Kim’s thoughts on Trump can change

North Korea warns Trump on year-end deadline

North Korea US

In case you missed the news from earlier today, North Korea has set a year-end deadline for the US to change its policies or Kim Jong Un may “embark on a new path” as denuclearisation talks between the two countries appear to have broken down.

If you’ve been following our headlines over the past few months, it is clear that the two countries aren’t getting along well with how frequent North Korea has been conducting missile launches and tests during the period.
As things stand, they want the US to lift more sanctions before committing to any more “denuclearisation” projects but the US wants it to be the other way around. Hence, we have reached a bit of an impasse at the moment.
If anything else, keep an eye on this issue here as it could present a wild card risk for markets in 2020 – alongside the host of other issues.