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Financial Markets: More Pirouettes Than The Bolshoi Ballet

Published 05/25/2021, 04:38 AM
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If financial markets were a ballet, it would surely be regarded as one of history’s most complex. No Sleeping Beauties or Swan Lakes here; instead, the markets engage in a seemingly impossible series of pirouettes, leaps (of faith), and changes of direction that would test the toes of any prima ballerina.

Overnight, a series of Federal Reserve Officials made their way to the orchestral pit and played the transitory inflation arrangement. Last week, what was ignored wasn’t in last night’s performance, as the dip-buying buy-everything ensemble freed themselves of constraints and got back to business as usual. Energy prices took a standing ovation and the bunches of flowers.

Stocks rallied—notably technology—with US long-dated yields headed south as the US dollar was sold, notably against Asian currencies, and our dear friends in the crypto-space powered higher.

The bitcoin boost was helped along by Elon Musk, who tweeted something about mining, as good a reason to indulge in a crypto-feeding frenzy as any, I guess. I may have to revise my “peak Elon” outlook.

Gold has held steady overnight because who wants gold when the world is saved? It has started retreating in Asia, and I suspect that some weekend trading crypto-hedging is being unwound.

The Chinese yuan rallied to near two-year highs versus the dollar as its currency basket moved higher against the greenback. Some corners of the market will suggest that a stronger yuan is an easy way for China to take the heat out of commodity prices, but that would be at the cost of more expensive exports.

If nothing else, the buy everything rally, which was spilling into Asian markets today, naturally, highlights just how much money is waiting on the sidelines in a zero per cent world to buy any dip.

Even the Fed Governor’s long treatise on a digital US dollar overnight couldn’t keep bitcoin or the US dollar un-Stable coins down. It should.

Admittedly, although prices have been rising worldwide, there have been enough speed bumps in the data along the way, notably in the US recently, to leave financial markets with nagging doubts.

The Federal Reserve is determined to keep it that way, likely with a taper-tantrum in mind. A Mike Tyson punch-in-the-face inflationary knockout blow has yet to be delivered, leading to a seemingly endless cycle of flip-flop behavior of late.

Hopefully, the Non-Farm Payrolls data will clarify the situation at the end of next week, one way or the other.

In the meantime, don’t take off your ballet shoes and be prepared to keep pirouetting.

In Asia, the data, although second-tier, was upbeat today. South Korean Consumer Confidence rose again but won’t move the Bank of Korea this week.

Singapore's final GDP Q1 expanded by 3.1% QoQ, and Thailand’s Balance of Trade for April slightly outperformed, rising by USD0.18 billion. Lunar New Year effects impacted the Thailand numbers, but today’s overall data picture is of a modest recovery continuing.

None of the data will have any impact as each of the countries mentioned, plus most of Asia ex-China, is struggling to deal with waves of COVID-19 infections. Most concerning is Malaysia, with India semi-priced in by markets that will only be focusing on the fall in daily cases to a number slightly less gigantic than previously.

Malaysia’s weak government has prevented it from entering a decisive lockdown. The danger is that the having-your-cake-and-eating-it approach, which has failed unceremoniously everywhere else globally, leads to a double-dip recession in Malaysia.

Finally, readers should keep an eye on the Turkish lira today. Turkey announced the sacking of one of four of its deputy central bank governors. Working for the central bank is a hazardous occupation under Erdogan, and previous sackings have been met with bouts of Turkish Lire (TRY) weakness.

USD/TRY was unchanged at 8.3900 at time of writing, but not far away from recent highs at 8.5700. That may change as European markets open, with Mr Erdogan intent on TRY-ing investor patience, rather than TRY-ing harder to manage the economy properly.

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