Global equity markets recaptured their reality denial mojo overnight, with Wall Street enjoying a boisterous session and currency markets partially awakening from their slumber. The real star of the show though was China, with both the Shanghai Composite and CSI 300 Futures finishing over 5.0% higher on larger than average volumes.
The only problem is that we have been here before in China. A very similar situation developed during the rally of 2014 to 2015. Stock margin lending exploded as Chinese stares staged an incredible state urged rally. That exploded in tears, however, with markets crashing 40% and China having to deploy its “national team” to buy everything and steady the ship.
It will probably prompt the v-shaped recovery fashionistas in western markets to unleash another wave of buying as well. Expect more record highs in the Nasdaq for a start. China may well be doing the rest of the world a favor, with a potentially ugly Q2 earnings season upon us, by fanning equity market fires. Economics, though, has an annoying habit of winning in the end. Shanghai may be giving the world an equity summer of love, but history tells us, the party will end abruptly. The last one ended in 2015 with a 40% collapse in Chinese stock markets. That’s one heck of a hangover.
News breaking from Australia suggests that winter is coming, both seasonally and metaphorically. Australia’s Covid-19 hotspot in Melbourne is apparently prompting the state of Victoria to consider a new four-week state-wide lockdown. Covid-19 cases continue spiking in Australia’s second most populace state. The Australian dollar has immediately moved lower, and stocks have quickly given up the day’s gains. It is a sagely warning of the economic danger that Covid-19 continues to inflict on the world. Sadly, if the situation in the United States and across Latin America can’t ram that message home, nothing probably will.
The Reserve Bank of Australia's latest interest rate decision left rates unchanged at 0.25%. As ever, it will be what the RBA says afterward that matters most.
Bank Negara Malaysia announced its latest rate decision, which was another 25-basis point cut to 1.75%.