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 Morning Bid: Rhyming but not repeating

Bull and bear, symbols for successful and bad trading are seen in front of the German stock exchange (Deutsche Boerse), in Frankfurt, Germany, March 25, 2020. REUTERS/Ralph Orlowski/File Photo

Morning Bid: Rhyming but not repeating

A look at the day ahead in markets from Saikat Chatterjee

Is this 2000? Or 2006 or even 2019? Financial markets in the last two weeks have had analysts reaching for the history books to explain a vigorous stock market rally and rising short-dated government bond yields.

And while some of the analyses can get lost in the blizzard of impressive milestones notched up by commodities and bonds in the first quarter of 2022, one thing is clear: this has the classic indicators of a late cycle economic expansion.

A period when economic growth is strong but slowing and inflation is high forcing policymakers to squeeze the monetary spigots means only one thing: time to load up on quality names.

Despite the 11% rise in world stocks in the last two weeks, utilities and healthcare names have outperformed the wider index. Even in credit markets where a high yield bond market rally has dominated headlines, the top gainers are defensive telecoms and utility names, according to BofA.

That trend shows no signs of slowing in the early days of April. Two-year U.S. Treasury yields hit their highest levels in three years at 2.4950%, pushing the dollar higher while an index of Asian stocks paused after recent gains.

A strong monthly U.S. jobs report on Friday and hawkish comments by U.S. policymakers has prompted traders to price in a 73% probability of a 50 basis points rate hike in May. The last time the Fed hiked rates by that quantum was in the tech-mania days of May 2000.

European and U.S. stock futures are slightly higher.

Oil prices inched higher on Monday as worries about tight supply persisted even as investors eyed the release of supplies from strategic reserves from consuming nations and a truce in Yemen sparked hopes that supply issues in the Middle East could abate.

Oil slid 13% last week – the biggest weekly fall in two years – after U.S. President Joe Biden announced the largest-ever oil reserves release.

Key developments that should provide more direction to markets on Monday:

Germany’s defence minister said on Sunday that the European Union must discuss banning the import of Russian gas after Ukrainian and European officials accused Russian forces of committing atrocities near Kyiv. read more

Telecom Italia has signed a non-disclosure agreement with Italian state lender CDP to start formal talks on potentially combining the phone group’s network with that of smaller broadband rival Open Fiber. read more

Speaker’s corner: ECB President Christine Lagarde, Bank of Spain´s governor Pablo Hernández de Cos, Jon Cunliffe, deputy governor, Bank of England.

Euro zone finance ministers meet on G20, banking union

German current account/trade balance

Euro zone Sentix index April

U.S. yield curve inverts
U.S. yield curve inverts

Reporting by Saikat Chatterjee, editing by Karin Strohecker

This article was originally published by Reuters.

Global Business Magazine

Global Business Magazine

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