Displaying items by tag: trade war

Monday, 25 June 2018 09:07

Morgan Stanley Says Yields Have Peaked

(New York)

Many investors are worried about rising yields, which could wreak havoc on everything from the economy, to income stocks, to all manner of bonds. Well, for what it is worth, Morgan Stanley has just put out a piece arguing that the 3.12% yield seen on the ten-year Treasury recently is it, the peak. Morgan Stanley says that yields will stop rising and they are advising clients to go long Treasury bonds at current yields. The argument stands in contrast to Pimco and JP Morgan, who both see yields moving towards 4%. The one caveat to the call is if trade tensions get settled quickly, as turmoil on that front is one of the bullish drivers they see for Treasuries.


FINSUM: If trade tensions keep flaring we agree that Treasury yields are likely to stay flat or fall as investors flee to safety.

Published in Bonds: Total Market
Monday, 25 June 2018 09:05

Algorithms Warn of Big Stock Correction

(New York)

As if there were not enough worrying indicators out there, Market Watch has featured a new worrisome measure. The paper interviewed a famous Wall Street quant who says that algorithms which track broad social media sentiment are showing significant risks of a serious decline in equities. The big worries on the public’s mind revolve around the escalating trade war between China and the US. The indicator also informs sector picks, to which strategist Yin Luo said “With U.S. stocks, we are bullish consumer discretionary, technology, and industrials over the medium horizon, and are negative on consumer staples and telecom services, where fundamentals remain relatively weak and momentum has been negative”.


FINSUM: We are always skeptical of these kinds of views because what people say on social media is not a very good reflection of what they are doing in their investment account. Further, there are likely mountains of people being assessed by the algorithms that have no trading/investment account, so their impact is nearly non existent.

Published in Eq: Large Cap
Monday, 25 June 2018 09:04

Trump to Cut Off Chinese Investment in US

(Washington)

The trade war between the US and China is intensifying. Investors will already be aware of the tit-for-tat $50 bn tariff packages the US and China have placed on each other, as well as Trump’s plan for a further $200 bn to be applied. However, the news is that Trump is now also preparing a comprehensive package of blockages to Chinese direct investment into the US. The amount of Chinese overseas investment flowing into the US has already plummeted to $1.8 bn in the first half of 2018, down from nearly $50 in 2016.


FINSUM: This trade spat just keeps escalating. The big risk is if China decides to sell US Treasuries and agency bonds as a payback, but we think that is still a few steps away.

Published in Politics
Monday, 25 June 2018 09:02

The US is Winning the Trade War

(Washington)

Last week was a brutal one for markets. The Dow fell about 2% over the week as the index approached its longest losing streak since 1978. However, the reality, according to Barron’s, is that the US is winning the trade war, at least so far. Trump has already imposed $50 of tariffs, which China responded to in kind. However, Trump is planning another $200 bn, while China only imports a total of $130 bn of goods, meaning they have much less room to retaliate. Further, US financial markets are much more broad and deep, meaning there are more places for investors to safely stash their money.


FINSUM: China does not have too many options to retaliate. If they devalue the yuan it will really hurt their markets; if they sell Treasury bonds they will either find no buyers (if they sell a lot at once) or the market will just absorb it in smaller bits.

Published in Politics

(Beijing)

All our readers will be aware of the intensifying trade war between the US and China. And while the US seems to have a strong position on trade (with less to lose than its partners), that is not the whole picture. The reality is that the US makes up much of what it loses on trade through massive overseas investment Dollars that flow into US assets. While much of the public’s awareness of this centers on Treasury bonds, one other big area of foreign participation is in MBS, or mortgage bonds. What is much less known is that more recently, foreign buyers, including China, have been much bigger consumers of US mortgage agency bonds (e.g. Fannie and Freddie).


FINSUM: China has the power to simply turn off the spigot on the mortgage market, which could lead to a surge in interest rates and a resulting collapse in prices. That would put US politicians in more hot water than tariffs ever could.

Published in Eq: Total Market
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