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Shanghai lockdown hurts oil, bonds and yen take a beating

A man wearing a protective mask, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, walks past an electronic board displaying graphs (top) of Nikkei index outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan, March 10, 2022. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

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LONDON, March 28 (Reuters) – Oil prices slid on Monday as a coronavirus lockdown in Shanghai fueled worries about weak demand, while the yen’s stomach-churning descent continued as the Bank of Japan stood in the way of higher yields.

World stocks were largely flat, holding their ground in the face of another brutal selloff in major bond markets.

Ten-year U.S. Treasury yields pushed decisively above the 2.5%-marker for the first time since 2019, two-year bond yields in the Netherlands and Belgium turned positive for the first time since 2014 and even Japanese yields defied central bank intervention to hit fresh six-year highs.

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The other eye-popping move came from the yen, which slid almost 1.5%.

China’s financial hub of 26 million people meanwhile told all firms to suspend manufacturing or have people work remotely in a two-stage lockdown over nine days. read more

The spread of restrictions in the world’s biggest oil importer saw Brent skid $4.35 to $116.33, while U.S. crude fell $4.5 or 4% to $109.38.

Although Chinese blue chips (.CSI300) shed 0.6% and Japan’s Nikkei (.N225) lost 0.7%, and U.S. stock futures eased , , weaker oil prices cheered European shares which were broadly firmer (.STOXX).

MSCI’s world stock index was flat, (.MIAPJ0000PUS), resilient in the face of a radically more hawkish Federal Reserve and surging bond yields.

Risk sentiment was helped by hopes of progress in Russian-Ukranian peace talks to be held in Turkey this week after President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said Ukraine was prepared to discuss adopting a neutral status as part of a deal.{nL2N2VU0EH]

“Sentiment has been surprisingly resilient in stock markets, which are buying positive headlines from the war in Ukraine,” said Jan von Gerich, chief analyst at Nordea.

“The repricing that continues at the short end of the U.S. yield curve is taking place really fast and without any consequences for Wall Street at the moment.”

Citi last week forecast 275 basis points of Federal Reserve tightening this year including half-point hikes in May, June, July and September.

YIELD SURGE

Expectations that the Fed could push harder and faster to tame inflation running at four-decade highs continued to batter sovereign bond markets.

Two-year Treasury yields were up around 10 basis points in London trade, having hit their highest levels since early 2019 at 2.41% . Ten-year yields also rose to new highs above 2.5% .

And one measure of the U.S. bond yield curve — the gap between five and 30-year Treasury yields — inverted for the first time since 2006 in a sign that recession risks are increasingly being priced in .

Timothy Graf, State Street’s head of EMEA macro strategy, said selling bonds felt like “the path of least resistance right now.”

“The Fed’s given no sign it will slow down, if anything they have ratcheted up the hawkish guidance,” he added.

Euro zone bond markets continued their move into positive-yield territory, while money market pricing suggested investors were now anticipating 60 bps worth of rate hikes from the European Central Bank by year-end versus 50 bps last week.

Australia’s 3-year bond yield rose to 2.386% , its highest level since 2014.

Japan’s 10-year government bond rose to a fresh six-year high of 0.25% , reaching the upper limit of the Bank of Japan’s policy band even after the central bank stepped into the market in efforts to rein it in.

The BOJ reinforced its super-loose policy by offering to buy as many bonds as needed to keep 10-year yields under 0.25%.

That saw the dollar rise to its highest since August 2015 at 123.82 yen , giving it a gain of over 7% for the month. Likewise, the resource-rich Australian dollar has climbed more than 10% this month to reach 93.20 yen .

The euro has lost about 2.3% on the dollar in the same period, but at $1.0954 is some way above the recent two-year trough of $1.0804.

In commodity markets, gold softened to $1,931 an ounce , down about 1.3%.

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Reporting by Dhara Ranasinghe, Editing by William Maclean

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Yen tumbles as BOJ intervenes to keep bond yields pinned down

HONG KONG/TOKYO, March 28 (Reuters) – The Japanese yen slipped nearly 1% to a six-year low on Monday, after the Bank of Japan intervened to stop government bond yields from rising above its key target, while rising U.S. yields pushed the dollar higher against other currencies too.

The BOJ, which has repeatedly said it is committed to keeping monetary policy loose, on Monday made two offers to buy an unlimited amount of government bonds with maturities of more than five years and up to 10 years. The central bank is aiming to stop rising global interest rates from pushing up Japanese yields.

The dollar climbed roughly 0.95% to 123.25 yen, its highest since December 2015. It rallied over 7% so far in March, its biggest monthly gain in over five years.

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“The market sees monetary policy divergence between the U.S. and Japan as the key driver of dollar-yen, so in contrast to the hawkish Fed comments recently, the (BOJ’s action) gives the impression that the BOJ remains dovish, and that’s leading to a higher dollar-yen,” said Shinichiro Kadota, senior currency strategist at Barclays in Tokyo.

“I think the risk is still to the upside in the near term, especially if this monetary policy divergence story stays intact. But the speed has been quite fast and it does seem a little overheated, so if we see any contrary headlines, we could see some correction as well,” he added.

The 10-year Treasuries yield was last 2.5567%, its highest since May 2019, and up 6.5 basis points on the day, as traders position themselves for an aggressive series of rate hikes from the U.S. Federal Reserve.

The two year yield was 2.412%, its highest since April 2019, with these higher rates underpinning the dollar. The greenback index against a basket of major rivals advanced 0.38% to 99.194.

The euro slid 0.27% to $1.0950 and sterling lost 0.36% to $1.3150.

“We expect that the euro will remain heavy this week. The balance of risks suggests EUR/USD may test 1.0800 in coming weeks,” said CBA analysts in a note.

Inflation figures from major European economies and the eurozone are due from Wednesday, which could also affect the direction of the euro.

Also potentially driving the dollar this week is Friday’s non farm payroll data in the U.S., though given the market is already positioned for an aggressive pace of rate hikes this year, its effect could be muted say analysts.

The Aussie dollar bucked the trend however, inching higher to $0.7513 to hold near last week’s four-month high, helped on the day by rising Australian bond yields, as well as the longer term impact of higher commodity prices.

Aussie currency watchers are also looking out to Australia’s budget on Tuesday. Australia’s Treasurer said on Sunday the budget would mark a very significant material improvement to the government’s bottom line.

One possible headwind for the Aussie is the COVID-19 situation in China, after Shanghai said on Sunday it would lockdown the city to carry out COVID-19 testing.

The dollar climbed to a two week high of 6.3986 on the offshore yuan on Monday morning, before paring gains.

In cryptocurrency markets bitcoin was sitting pretty around $46,900 after jumping to as high as $47,766 in early trading, its highest level since early January.

Ether , the world’s second largest cryptocurrency, was at $3,320.

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Reporting by Alun John in Hong Kong and Kevin Buckland in Tokyo; Editing by Shri Navaratnam

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World stocks set for consecutive weekly gains for first time in 2022

A woman stands in front of a screen displaying Japan’s Nikkei share average, U.S. and other countries’ stock market indicators outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan December 19, 2018. REUTERS/Issei Kato

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LONDON, March 25 (Reuters) – World stocks are headed for a second consecutive week of gains for the first time in 2022 though sentiment was broadly cautious as markets evaluated the economic risks from the Federal Reserve’s policy tightening and Russia’s war in Ukraine.

Technology shares in Hong Kong (.HSTECH) led losers and weighed on the broader market after U.S. regulators said recent media speculation about an imminent deal that would stop hundreds of Chinese companies from being kicked off American stock exchanges was “premature”. read more

Even though global flash PMI data for March this week showed the world economy was broadly resilient, investors have turned increasingly bearish on the economic outlook. Barclays, for example, cut its world economic growth forecast this week to 3.3% while traders have ramped up short bets.

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Global bond markets were still in the grips of one of their worst selloffs in recent memory, while gauges of market volatility threw mixed signals. Nickel , the face of market volatility, climbed 9% on Friday after hitting the 15% daily trading limit in the previous two sessions.

“I think the passing of the quarter end and fiscal year end in Japan next week will give a cleaner read on the resilience of risk assets and currencies to the bear market in bonds and prospect of accelerated Fed tightening in May,” said Kenneth Broux, an FX strategist at Societe Generale in London.

Benchmark U.S. ten-year Treasury yields which have led the broader bond market selloff held at 2.34% on Friday after hitting a near three-year peak of above $2.41% this week. Yields have risen 75 bps in the past two weeks as traders have scrambled to revise their rate hike expectations.

While Treasuries remained on course for one of their worst quarterly routs since at least the early 1970s, the dollar has benefited from the widening interest rate differential story with the Japanese yen briefly plunging to a late 2015 low of 122 yen per dollar.

The broader dollar index took a breather on Friday but was on track for a small weekly gain.

Markets are expecting as many as 190 rate hikes for the remainder of the year after a 25 bps U.S. rate hike last week. Investors are assigning a 88% probability of a 50 bps rate hike in March.

Chicago Fed President Charles Evans was the latest U.S. policymaker to sound more hawkish, saying on Thursday the Fed needs to raise interest rates “in a timely fashion” this year and in 2023 to curb high inflation before it is embedded in U.S. psychology and becomes even harder to get rid of. read more

Demand for safe-haven assets including gold and the Swiss franc remained resilient as the conflict in Ukraine showed no signs of slowing. Ukrainian troops are recapturing towns east of the capital Kyiv and Russian forces who had been trying to seize the city are falling back on their overextended supply lines. read more

Spot gold remained elevated at $1,959 an ounce, steady on the day.

Overnight the three main U.S. stock indexes each rallied more than 1%, as investors snapped up beaten-down shares of chipmakers and big growth names and supported by a fall in oil prices.

Oil continued to slide a little on Friday, as the United States and allies considered releasing more oil from storage to cool markets. Brent crude fell 1.3% to $117.78 per barrel and U.S. crude down 1.6% to $110 a barrel, but prices were still very high by historic standards.

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Reporting by Saikat Chatterjee; additional reporting by Alun John in Hong Kong; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky

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Wall Street pushes Treasury yields, stocks higher

  • U.S. stocks advance, echoing gains in Europe
  • 10-year Treasury yields hit highest level since 2019
  • Oil prices give back some gains
  • Gold dips, Bitcoin advances

BOSTON/LONDON, March 22 (Reuters) – U.S. stocks regained ground on Tuesday, while Treasury yields climbed higher and oil dipped, as investors adjusted their expectations for rate hikes following hawkish comments from the U.S. Federal Reserve.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) rose 281.07 points, or 0.81%, to 34,834.06; the S&P 500 (.SPX) gained 27.59 points, or 0.62%, to 4,488.77; and the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC) added 87.88 points, or 0.64%, to 13,926.34.

Stocks gaining included banks potentially benefiting from higher interest rates such as Morgan Stanley (MS.N) and Wells Fargo & Co (WFC.N), and sports apparel giant Nike Inc (NKE.N), which advanced around 5.5% after it beat quarterly profit and revenue expectations. read more

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Fed Chair Jerome Powell said on Monday the central bank could move “more aggressively” to raise rates to fight inflation, possibly by more than 25 basis points (bps) at once. read more

Markets were recalibrating the higher possibility of a 50-bps hike. On Tuesday morning, money markets were pricing in an 80% chance of a 50-bps hike in May, although this dipped to 70% around midday.

At around 1345 GMT, the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield was at 2.366%, having hit its highest since 2019 .

RBC Capital Markets’ chief U.S. economist Tom Porcelli wrote in a note to clients that during the speech “it was easy to wonder if a 75bps hike or even going intra-meeting is possible.”

“Both outcomes seem incredibly extreme but when we hear Powell talk about inflation he comes off as incredibly anxious to us.”

Euro zone government bond yields also rose, with Germany’s benchmark 10-year yield hitting around 0.515% , its highest level since 2018.

Although Wall Street had closed lower on Monday after Powell’s comments, stock markets in Europe rose. The STOXX 600 was up 0.65%, having climbed high in recent sessions to reach a one-month high (.STOXX). London’s FTSE 100 was up 0.54% (.FTSE).

The MSCI world equity index, which tracks shares in 50 countries, was up 0.63% on the day (.MIWD00000PUS).

Matthias Scheiber, global head of multiasset portfolio management at Allspring Global Investments, said the pickup in stocks could be a case of investors buying the dip, but that growth stocks would struggle if the U.S. 10-year yield moves closer to 2.5%.

“We saw the sharp rise in yields yesterday and we see that continuing today on the long end, so that’s likely to put pressure on equities. … It will be hard for equities to have a positive performance.”

But JPMorgan said that 80% of its clients plan to increase equity exposure, which is a record high.

“With positioning light, sentiment weak and geopolitical risks likely to ease over time, we believe risks are skewed to the upside,” wrote JPMorgan strategists in a note to clients.

“We believe investors should add risk in areas that overshot on the downside such as innovation, tech, biotech, EM/China, and small caps. These segments are pricing in a severe global recession, which will not materialize, in our view.”

The conflict in Ukraine continued to weigh on sentiment. U.S. President Joe Biden issue one of his strongest warnings yet that Russia is considering using chemical weapons. read more

Oil prices lost some ground gained Monday following news that some European Union members were considering imposing sanctions on Russian oil – although Germany said the bloc was too dependent on Russian oil and gas to be able to cut itself off. read more

U.S. crude fell 1.08% to $110.91 per barrel and Brent was at $115.53, down 0.08% on the day.

The U.S. dollar index was steady at 98.38 , while the euro was up 0.2% at $1.103 . read more

Gold prices fell on Tuesday, pressured by the Fed chief’s hawkish approach to tackling inflation. Spot gold dropped 0.6% to $1,923.60 an ounce. read more

Leading cryptocurrency Bitcoin was up 4.3% at around $42,803, adding to its gains since its intraday low of $34,324 on Feb. 24 when Russia invaded Ukraine. read more

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Reporting by Lawrence Delevingne in Boston and Elizabeth Howcroft in London; editing by Jonathan Oatis

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Column: Australian alumina ban will squeeze Rusal and aluminium: Andy Home

LONDON, March 21 (Reuters) – Australia’s decision to ban exports of alumina to Russia tightens further the raw materials squeeze on Russian aluminium giant Rusal . read more

The company’s four million tonnes of smelter capacity each year processes eight million tonnes of alumina, which sits between bauxite and refined metal in the aluminium production chain.

Rusal’s domestic alumina plants accounted for only 37% of its smelter needs last year. The balance was imported. The top two suppliers were Ukraine, where Russia’s invasion has closed Rusal’s Nikolaev refinery, and Australia.

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The company said it is “currently evaluating” the loss of its number two raw material supplier but the market has already reacted to the potential resulting loss of Russian metal.

London Metal Exchange (LME) three-month aluminium jumped more than 5% at its opening to $3,554 per tonne on Monday morning and was last trading around $3,545.

Russia’s imports of alumina in 2021

RAW MATERIALS SQUEEZE

Rusal has so far escaped direct Western sanctions thanks to the deal that was done to lift U.S. sanctions in 2019. Rusal’s oligarch owner Oleg Deripaska remained blacklisted but Rusal was excluded after he reduced his controlling stake in the EN+ holding company.

That may just have changed, though.

The Australian government’s ban, expedited to stop a Russian-bound alumina shipment leaving this week, doesn’t explicitly name Rusal but it is a de-facto sanction on the company that dominates Russian aluminium production.

The status of Rusal’s 20% stake in the QAL refinery in Queensland is highly moot since it now can’t export its offtake share and its partner Rio Tinto (RIO.L) is committed to disengaging from all Russian joint ventures. read more

Rio has already suspended a tolling arrangement with Rusal’s Aughinish alumina refinery in Ireland, forcing the Russian producer to redirect bauxite shipments from its Guinea mines.

Such self-sanctioning limits Rusal’s room for manoeuvre in terms of replacing lost Australian feed.

The sea-borne alumina market is dominated by Rio Tinto, U.S. producer Alcoa (AA.N) and Norway’s Hydro . All three have said they will reduce exposure to Russia or, in the case of Hydro, not enter into new contracts with Russian entities.

The biggest question mark of all hangs over the Irish refinery, Rusal’s largest overseas alumina plant with production last year of 1.9 million tonnes.

Only a quarter of its output flowed to Russia in 2021, meaning there is plenty of potential to redirect shipments from Europe to Russia.

The Irish government is understandably keen to keep Aughinish operating but the European Union is already extending sanctions into the metals arena with a ban on Russian steel imports and will have no doubt noted Australia’s upping of the sanctions ante.

With or without its Irish lifeline, however, Rusal is facing a raw materials squeeze.

China may be its answer but China has itself been importing significant amounts of alumina in recent years to keep up with demand.

Even assuming the political will to supply Rusal with alumina, the market incentive may not be there, given expectations of rising domestic alumina demand as Chinese smelters lift output after an easing of power controls.

ALUMINIUM SQUEEZE

The aluminium price’s reaction to news of the Australian ban tells you how concerned it is about the potential loss of Russian metal production.

As the Australian Foreign Ministry helpfully pointed out in its statement, “aluminium is a global input across the auto, aerospace, packaging, machinery and construction sectors”.

Which is a real problem if the West is losing access to Rusal’s four million tonnes of annual production.

The aluminium supply chain was already creaking. Power-efficiency constraints have turned China, the world’s largest producer, into a net importer of unwrought aluminium to feed its massive downstream products sector.

Production at Europe’s power-hungry smelters has been falling due to high energy prices, a phenomenon that has only gotten worse since Russia launched on Feb. 24 what it calls a “special military operation” to disarm and “denazify” Ukraine.

Visible aluminium stocks have been sliding steadily for over a year to plug the supply-chain gaps. Total LME inventory stands at 704,850 tonnes, the lowest level since 2007.

The global aluminium market is tight, the Western European market particularly so, both because of the recent smelter cuts and its dependence on Russian supply.

Europe accounted for 41% of Rusal’s sales last year and disruption to Russian shipments will only widen the region’s existing supply deficit.

Moreover, Rusal is a critical supplier of “green” – low-carbon – aluminium from its hydro-powered Siberian smelters.

While global aluminium trade flows may eventually adjust in the wake of the Ukraine crisis, automakers keen to use only the greenest metal in their next-generation electric vehicles may find a far more challenging supply landscape.

TIGHTENING THE SANCTIONS SCREW

The complexity of Rusal’s raw material supply web was exposed back in 2018 when U.S. sanctions set off a chain reaction that spanned Ireland, Guinea and Australia and ended with European car companies lobbying the European Commission to intercede with the United States.

Those U.S. sanctions were a bolt from the blue.

This time around the effect has so far been more incremental as supply, logistics and financing avenues dwindle due to self-sanctioning.

The Australian government’s move to add alumina to the sanctions list marks a significant escalation in this process.

Critical for Rusal and aluminium market alike is whether other countries follow suit.

The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.

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Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise

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Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.

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Stocks step back, oil bounces as peace talks stall

FILE PHOTO – Monitors displaying the stock index prices and Japanese yen exchange rate against the U.S. dollar are seen after the New Year ceremony marking the opening of trading in 2022 at the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE), amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Tokyo, Japan January 4, 2022. REUTERS/Issei Kato

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  • Oil over $100 and extending gains
  • Rate cut hopes keep China shares bid
  • Biden-Xi phone call due at 1300 GMT

SINGAPORE, March 18 (Reuters) – Stockmarkets took a breather on Friday after several days of sizeable gains, as geo-political tensions arising from the Ukraine conflict kept investors on guard going into the weekend.

After a fourth straight day of talks between Russian and Ukrainian negotiators without tangible progress, earlier hopes for a peace deal have begun to wane and oil prices have begun climbing again. read more

Adding to the mix, U.S. President Joe Biden is expected to deliver a warning that Beijing will pay a price if it supports Russia’s war effort when he speaks to China’s President Xi Jinping in a call scheduled for 1300 GMT. read more

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MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan (.MIAPJ0000PUS) was flat and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng steadied following a furious two-day surge. Japan’s Nikkei (.N225) rose 0.6%. S&P 500 futures eased 0.4% while Euro STOXX 50 futures and FTSE futures were flat.

Oil, which had crumbled some 30% from last week’s peak, has bounced hard as traders fret that hope for peace in Ukraine is misplaced. Brent crude futures were last up 2% and at $108.64, have added more than $10 a barrel in two sessions.

“It’s very difficult to get any confidence that you’re going to be able to reliably source commodities out of Russia or Ukraine,” said Tobin Gorey, a commodities strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia in Sydney. “You’re going to be looking elsewhere and that just tends to get priced up.”

Wheat and corn futures, which are sensitive to Black Sea supply disruptions, have bounced sharply.

Australia’s miner-heavy ASX 200 index (.AXJO) logged its best week since February last year and the commodities-sensitive Australian dollar hit a two-week high of $0.7398.

INVERSION

Problems faced by policymakers whose economies are suffering surging inflation and sagging growth were also underscored during a series of central bank meetings this week.

The U.S. Federal Reserve raised rates for the first time in more than three years on Wednesday, and surprised traders with a more hawkish than expected outlook. The Bank of England also hiked but surprised with a dovish outlook that drove a rally in gilts. read more

The Bank of Japan offered no surprises on Friday, leaving policy ultra easy, which has kept heavy pressure on the yen. read more

Japan’s currency hit a six-year low of 119.13 this week and last traded at 118.78 per dollar. “The next multi-session target may well be the 120.00 psychological level,” said Terence Wu, a strategist at OCBC Bank in Singapore.

The euro hovered at $1.1086.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng (.HSI) followed its worst session in more than six years with its biggest two-day rally since 1998 this week and rate cut hopes kept it bid on Friday.

Treasuries steadied, but a flat yield curve that is flirting with inversion reflected worries about longer-term growth. The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield was last at 2.1780%.

Spot gold hovered at $1,932 and bitcoin was clinging on above $40,000.

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Reporting by Tom Westbrook
Editing by Shri Navaratnam & Simon Cameron-Moore

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Stocks steady after Fed hike, BoE’s turn next

A man wearing a protective mask, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, walks past an electronic board displaying various countries’ stock indexes including Russian Trading System (RTS) Index which is empty, outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan, March 10, 2022. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

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LONDON/TOKYO, March 17 (Reuters) – Europe’s stock markets consolidated strong gains made in Asia on Thursday, after China signalled more support for its spluttering economy and the Federal Reserve had pressed ahead with the first U.S. interest rate rise in more than three years.

Traders remained gripped by the devastating war in Ukraine, but with hopes of possible a peace deal faint but alive they were also watching to see if the Bank of England raises UK interest rates again later too. read more

The EuroSTOXX 600 (.STOXX) was 0.1% lower after an initial rise. Earlier 3.5% leaps by both the Nikkei in Tokyo (.N225) and emerging market stocks (.MSCIEF) meant MSCI’s main world index (.MIWD00000PUS) was still up and more than 6% higher in the last three days, albeit after a torrid start to the year.

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Sanctions-ravaged Russia’s ongoing shelling of Ukraine meant commodity markets continued to gyrate wildly with oil prices back over the symbolic $100 level again. The Kremlin lashed out at U.S. President Joe Biden labelling Russian President Vladimir Putin a war criminal, but said it was putting “colossal energy” into peace talks. read more

Metals markets faced more drama after nickel trading had to be halted again on London Metal Exchange again on Wednesday.

“The reaction both this morning and overnight validates that the markets think the Fed is in line or ahead of the curve and doing the right thing,” by hiking interest rates, Chief Investment Officer of Close Brothers Asset Management, Robert Alster, said.

He added it would also be the “right thing” for the Bank of England to raise its rates later for a third meeting running, back to its pre-pandemic level of 0.75%.

The BoE last month predicted inflation will peak at around 7.25% in April – almost four times its 2% target – but that forecast has been overtaken by seismic shifts in European energy markets following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

“The crunch point is that we are all expecting inflation to start coming down after Easter,” Alster added. “But if that doesn’t happen then we all probably need to have a reset.”

The stock market gains had followed a 2.2% surge on Wall Street’s S&P 500 (.SPX) overnight.

Bond markets meanwhile were beginning to settle after Treasury yields had spiked to nearly three-year highs following the Fed’s signal that it also planned to hike rate at every meeting for the remainder of this year to aggressively curb inflation. read more

Ten-year Treasuries were last at 2.12% while Germany’s benchmark 10-year Bund yield slipped back 2 basis points to 0.382% having started the day edging higher, extending the previous session’s gains to hit 0.408%, its highest since November 2018 DE10YT=RR.

The more upbeat sentiment in recent days means there are “fewer excuses for central banks to delay policy tightening,” ING rates strategists said in a note to clients.

UK inflation surging

ASIA RISES

The dollar, though, remained on the back foot in the FX markets. The dollar index , which tracks it against six other major currencies, was slightly weaker at 98.476 after also dropping 0.5% on Wednesday.

Where the dollar showed some strength was against Japan’s currency, standing at 118.82 yen , not too far from the more than six year high of 119.13 reached overnight amid a widening monetary policy gap.

The Bank of Japan is widely seen keeping its vast stimulus programme in place on Friday as the economy there continues to sputter. read more

Meanwhile, concerns about a sharp slowdown in China, which is battling a spreading COVID-19 outbreak with ultra-restrictive measures, were assuaged after its Vice Premier Liu He on Wednesday has signalled more stimulus was on the way.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index had surged more than 5% overnight, adding to a 9% leap on Wednesday. Beaten down sectors including tech and real estate soared, with Country Garden Services Holdings (6098.HK) and Country Garden Holdings (2007.HK) climbing about 28% and 26%, respectively.

Online giant Alibaba (9988.HK) leapt 9%, China’s blue chips (.CSI300) gained 2.3%, extending the previous day’s 4.3% rebound while Japan also saw outsized gains, with the Nikkei (.N225) vaulting 3.5% and touching a two-week peak.

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Reporting by Marc Jones; Editing by Toby Chopra

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Asia stocks extend losses as Ukraine war, China’s COVID surge hit sentiment

A man wearing a protective mask, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, walks past an electronic board displaying graphs (top) of Nikkei index outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan, March 10, 2022. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

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SYDNEY, March 15 (Reuters) – Asian stocks were in the red on Tuesday as surging COVID-19 cases in China hit the confidence of investors who are already worried about the Ukraine war and the first U.S. interest rate rise in three years that could come this week.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan (.MIAPJ0000PUS) fell 1.97%, led by pronounced weakness in Chinese stocks. The index is down 8.2% so far this month.

Global oil prices fell overnight as prospects of talks between Russia and Ukraine reaching some kind of resolution eased immediate concerns about energy supply disruption. read more

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Those losses extended into the Asian session, however, the investor focus had shifted to the demand side, with China’s new wave of COVID-19 infections casting a cloud over the outlook for the world’s second-largest economy.

More broadly, a lack of major progress seen in Ukraine-Russia talks on Monday added to the nervousness in equity markets while concerns are now growing about the potential for new tensions between China and United States.

Washington has warned Beijing against providing military or financial help to Moscow after its invasion of Ukraine, as sanctions on Russian political and business leaders mount. read more

“The question we are asking is whether the markets have reached peak bearishness,” said Jack Siu, Credit Suisse’s chief investment officer for Greater China.

“We know there has been a lot of bad news, there could be worse to come, stock prices have fallen substantially and there is no clarity on any resolutions from U.S. regulators towards Chinese listed stocks there.”

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index (.HSI) remained mired in negative territory Tuesday, dropping 4% following an almost 5% selloff a day earlier. Hong Kong’s main board is down 17% so far in March.

The city’s tech index (.HSTECH) has been hammered, falling nearly 30% this month as investors worry about the next regulatory crackdown from U.S. and Chinese authorities on the sector.

China’s CSI300 index (.CSI300) was down 1.78%, pushing its losses for the month out to 11.2%. Australian shares (.AXJO) closed down 0.73%.

Shrugging off the weakness in Asia, however, stock futures for the S&P 500 rose 0.21% while Tokyo’s Nikkei Index (.N225) reversed its losses and was marginally higher, up 0.22%.

Adding to the overall negative sentiment for markets are rising case numbers of COVID-19 in China, which investors fear will hurt the mainland’s economic growth in the first quarter. read more

China on Tuesday reported 3,602 new confirmed coronavirus cases compared with 1,437 on Monday. read more .

During the Asian session, U.S. crude slipped a further 5.2% to $97.66 a barrel. Brent crude was down 5.16% to $101.37 per barrel. read more

“Right now everyone is looking at the Chinese cases and realising that has to have an effect on production,” said Hong Hao, BOCOM International’s head of research.

“China’s growth in the first quarter could be closer to zero than 5.5%. There’s a ripple effect. There’s Ukraine, the risk of U.S. sanctions on China and rising Chinese domestic COVID cases – it does not look good.”

Investor focus is also on the U.S Federal Reserve, which meets on Wednesday and is expected to hike interest rates for the first time in three years to offset rising inflation.

Wall Street experienced a mixed session, with declining technology companies prompting most indexes to close lower Monday. read more

The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury notes rose to 2.1384%.

The two-year yield , which rises with traders’ expectations of higher Fed fund rates, touched 1.865%, up from 1.849%.

Gold was also weaker in Asia with the spot price at $1,932.1 per ounce.

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Reporting by Scott Murdoch in Sydney; Editing by Sam Holmes

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Chinese tycoon’s ‘big short’ on nickel trips up Tsingshan’s miracle growth

  • Tsingshan faces losses from short position
  • Chairman Xiang has been building short positions for a while
  • LME suspended nickel trading last week
  • Tsingshan’s business built on nickel productions in Indonesia

March 14 (Reuters) – (This March 13 story corrects size of Morowali industrial park in paragraph 20, and to show production data is for whole company, not only for its Sulawesi facilities, in paragraph 21)

Chinese tycoon Xiang Guangda has to find a way to bail his Tsingshan Holding Group out of a crisis after its bet on nickel prices backfired, fuelling more volatility in a metal essential for the electric vehicles industry.

One of the world’s top nickel producers faces massive losses on its short positions after prices soared over $100,000 per tonne last week and forced the London Metal Exchange to halt nickel trading. read more

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Tsingshan has to either pay off the outstanding short positions, which could be as high as $8 billion, or prove it has sufficient deliverable nickel to repay in kind.

Beijing could step in to rescue Tsingshan, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters. China could swap some of its high grade nickel reserves for low grade nickel pig iron (NPI) that Tsingshan produces to help it meet LME quality standards. China is estimated to hold around 100,000 tonnes of nickel in state stocks, two analysts said.

Tsingshan and China’s state reserves administration did not respond to requests for comment.

Tsingshan has figured in market swings before.

Last year, it triggered a price drop with surprise news that it would provide nickel matte to battery materials makers, potentially solving a key bottleneck for electric vehicles by boosting battery-grade supply in a cheaper way.

Betting prices would fall, Tsingshan started building a short position last year. The bet backfired partly as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine sent metals prices soaring, putting pressure on holders of big short positions, including Tsingshan.

“Markets were sensing that (Tsingshan) were going to make a move, but they probably made it too early … a quarter or so too early and nobody was anticipating what happened in Ukraine,” said Angela Durrant, Wood Mackenzie’s principal nickel analyst.

Tsingshan has suggested foreign elements may be driving up nickel prices.

“Foreigners do have some actions and we are actively co­­ordinating [with related parties],” China Business News quoted Xiang as saying on March 8.

The market gyrations have had no impact on Tsingshan’s Indonesia operations, a corporate mining source familiar with the matter told Reuters.

For Indonesia, Tsingshan is a means to fulfill its ambition to become a one-stop shop for EV battery ingredients and the company has executed projects at lightning speed. Western firms often privately complained about the access and resources Tsingshan got in the country.

“Government has ambition in Indonesia, they want to build the hub for battery for electrical car. That’s why you see the policy to support the industry,” the source said. “We are affected by COVID, but not affected by this (short exposure).”

Tsingshan is also seen as a poster child in Southeast Asia for China’s Belt and Road Initiative, President Xi Jinping’s vast infrastructure programme.

In contrast to privately-held Tsingshan, several high profile projects led by Chinese state-backed firms have been mothballed amid overpricing, corruption and debt sustainability concerns.

MARKET DISRUPTOR

Founded in 1988 in Wenzhou, Tsingshan started out in stainless steel production and making automobile windows and doors.

But its fortunes changed when Xiang, 64, started exploring Indonesian markets in 2009. Over the next decade, it shook the global nickel industry with low-cost nickel pig iron.

It set up facilities in Indonesia, the world’s largest nickel producer, with output ranging from nickel sulphate to nickel matte, an intermediate product that can be used in both stainless steel and batteries.

Tsingshan is spearheading Indonesia’s two major nickel hubs, including the Morowali industrial park, which employs over 40,000 people and spans 2,000 hectares with an airport, mineral processing plants, a port and executive visitors hotel.

The company has said it aims to produce 850,000 tonnes of nickel equivalents this year and 1.1 million tonnes in 2023.

“There was nothing there on that site in 2015 … so they did something absolutely miraculous,” Durrant said. “Getting away from higher Chinese power (costs), moving everything over to Indonesia was a masterstroke for them.”

The industry credits much of this success to Xiang.

He became known as a market disruptor who could “take the world by storm”, said Steven Brown, an independent nickel consultant in Canberra who spent two days touring Tsingshan’s production facilities with Xiang in 2014.

Xiang opposes high nickel prices and is fixed on being a low-cost producer of nickel and stainless steel, Brown said.

“I don’t think this crisis will result in too much of a change in strategy from Tsingshan,” he added.

Market sources said though Tsingshan has cut its exposure it is unlikely to have fully covered all its positions.

State-backed Chinese newspaper Securities Daily said on March 9 that Tsingshan had deployed “enough spot products” for delivery by swapping its nickel matte with nickel plates in the domestic market.

The LME allows delivery of nickel cathodes, including plate, and briquettes.

“There isn’t much spot nickel product in the market, it’s not even likely that Tsingshan could get 100,000 tonnes,” said a Guangdong-based analyst who declined to be named.

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Additional reporting by Ed Davies and Dominique Patton; Editing by Diane Craft

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Shares gain as oil slips on hopes for Ukraine progress

A man wearing a protective mask, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, walks past an electronic board displaying Shanghai Composite index, Nikkei index and Dow Jones Industrial Average outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan, March 7, 2022. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

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  • >Asian stock markets :
  • S&P 500 futures firm 0.5%, China stocks slip
  • Yields rise ahead of expected rate hikes from Fed, BoE
  • Dollar climbs to 5-year peak on yen as BOJ lags
  • U.S. crude oil falls over $2 a barrel

SYDNEY, March 14 (Reuters) – Most share markets firmed and oil slid on Monday on hopes for progress in Russian-Ukraine peace talks even as fighting continued to rage, while bond markets braced for rate rises in the United States and UK this week.

While Russian missiles hit a large Ukrainian base near the border with Poland on Sunday, both sides gave their most upbeat assessment yet of prospects for talks. read more

Just the chance of peace saw S&P 500 stock futures add 0.5%, while Nasdaq futures rose 0.4%. EUROSTOXX 50 futures gained 0.5% and FTSE futures 0.2%.

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Tokyo’s Nikkei (.N225) rose 0.9%, but MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan (.MIAPJ0000PUS) was dragged down 1.6% by losses in China.

Chinese blue chips (.CSI300) shed 1.7% after a jump in coronavirus cases saw the southern city of Shenzen locked down and stoked speculation about more policy easing. read more

Bonds elsewhere remained under pressure having taken a beating last week as surging commodity prices looked set to boost inflation further, with yields on 10-year Treasuries rising four basis points to 2.04% .

Notably, a key measure of U.S. inflation expectations climbed to 3% and near record highs .

That merely cemented expectations the Federal Reserve would lift rates by 25 basis points at its policy meeting this week and signal more to come through members’ “dot plot” forecasts.

“The dots will likely be mainly clustered around four or five hikes for 2022, up from three previously, given the stronger pace of inflation since the January FOMC meeting,” said Kevin Cummins, chief U.S. economist at NatWest Markets.

“We suspect we could also get an addendum on how the Fed plans to reduce the size of the balance sheet as early as this week.”

The Bank of England is expected to lift its rates to 0.75% on Thursday, the third rise in a row, and to signal more with the market pricing an aggressive 2% by year-end. read more

Fed fund futures imply no less than six or seven hikes this year to around 1.75%, keeping the U.S. dollar underpinned near the highest since May 2020.

The euro was stuck at $1.0905 , and not far from its recent 22-month trough of $1.0804, while the dollar hit a fresh five-year peak on the yen at 117.87 .

The Bank of Japan is seen lagging far behind other major central banks in tightening policy.

“The yen has been unable to display its typical safe-haven attributes, partly because of the big rise in U.S. yields and the BoJ yield curve control policy that prevents JGBs following the move up in core global yields,” said Rodrigo Catril, a senior FX strategist at NAB.

“Japan is also a big energy importer adding to concerns over a terms of trade shock from higher energy prices.”

Gold lost some of its safe-haven charm on Monday, easing 0.5% to $1,975 an ounce and away for last week’s peak at $2,069.

Likewise, the chance of progress on Ukraine saw oil prices surrender a little of their recent gains, even as talks with producer Iran seemed to be stalled. read more

Brent was last quoted $2.13 lower at $110.54, while U.S. crude fell $2.46 to $106.84.

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Reporting by Wayne Cole; Editing by Sam Holmes & Shri Navaratnam

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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