Protectionist Fears Flood Markets; Risk Appetite Plummets

 | Mar 23, 2018 09:00

Market Overview

Risk appetite has plummeted as fears over protectionism and a trade war between the world’s two largest economies have taken hold. Yesterday, Donald Trump signed a memorandum on potentially $60bn of trade tariffs on China . China’s response was “China is not afraid of and will not recoil from a trade war”, according to the China embassy in Washington. Although China has only announced around $3bn of tariffs on US goods, so far, these are not the words of a nation willing to stand aside and let this happen quietly. It may be that quite how China deals with this situation in the coming days will determine the market’s appetite for risk again.

The big loser is global trade and ultimately the end consumer. Subsequently, the dollar has come under renewed pressure and investors have sought after safe haven plays. Treasury yields continue to fall back on growth fears, with the US 10 year yield now around 2.81% (it has lost over 12 basis points now since the Fed meeting). In the forex space, the yen is a chief outperformer in this situation, however the dollar is underperforming across the majors. Aussie/Yen (the chart of the day) is a key indicator of risk appetite and has fallen to 16 month lows in the past 24 hours. Gold has also taken a leg higher. However the most stark move has come with a massive sell-off on Wall Street last night, with the Dow losing over 700 points. This selling pressure flooded into Asian markets and subsequently the Europeans are feeling the brunt today.

Wall Street closed sharply lower last night, with the S&P 500 -2.5% at 2644, whilst Asian markets were absolutely slammed overnight, with the Nikkei almost 1000 points lower (down 4.5%). European markets are also under early pressure, although interestingly not as much as perhaps expected. In forex, there is broad selling pressure on the dollar today with little real standout performer in early moves, although it is interesting to see the sterling strength fading. In commodities, the dollar weakness and safe haven move has seen gold shoot higher by $13 whilst oil is also around 1% higher, helped by comments from Saudi Arabia that the cooperation on production between OPEC and Russia needed to continue into 2019.

Friday brings a rather hectic week of data to a close with a very quiet European morning and little to trouble traders until the US Core Durable Goods Orders (ex-transport) which are at 1230GMT and are expected to grow by +0.5% on the month (after a decline of -0.3% last month). Canadian CPI inflation for February is at 1230GMT and is expected to move higher to +2.0% for the year. US New Home Sales are at 1400GMT and are expected to improve by 4.7% to 621,000 (from 593,000 last month).

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Chart of the Day – AUD/JPY

The increased concerns over US protectionism and how this will impact on global trade are played out in Aussie/Yen. The Aussie is linked to Chinese growth and is a higher risk major currency, whilst the yen is a safe haven. Subsequently with risk appetite dramatically deteriorating yesterday, we see a huge bear candle formation on AUD/JPY. Technically we also see a key move to the downside, as the intraday move below 81.25 support but also, and more decisively, a close below 81.50 which is a 16 month closing low. The technical deterioration continues on the medium term downtrend channel that has formed in recent months. Concern also comes with the negative configuration on the momentum indicators which show the MACD lines again crossing lower whilst the RSI still has downside potential in the latest move. Rallies are now a chance to sell. Wednesday’s lower high at 82.57 is now clearly key near term resistance whilst the hourly chart shows resistance now between 81.50/81.80 is now a selling area as old support becomes new resistance. Continued trading below 81.50 increases the corrective move of the long term bull run from 73.21/90.30 with the 50% Fibonacci retracement having been broken at 81.75 which now opens the 61.8% Fib retracement at 79.74. The initial support is the overnight low at 80.51, with 80.00 the next real basis of support before 79.75 the 61.8% Fib retraement.