Abating US-China Trade Tensions Boost Sentiment; Equities Rise And Yen Falls

 | Mar 27, 2018 04:23AM ET

Here are the latest developments in global markets:

  • FOREX: The dollar was not much changed against a basket of currencies on Tuesday, consolidating its losses from yesterday that saw it lose 0.5%, recording a more than one-month low along the way. Elsewhere, the yen was extending its losses from yesterday on the back of risk appetite returning to the markets.
  • STOCKS: US markets staged a spectacular comeback yesterday, as headlines of progress being made in trade talks between the US and China helped diminish concerns of an imminent trade war, and revive risk appetite. The Nasdaq Composite led the recovery, gaining a whooping 3.3%, while the Dow Jones and S&P 500 followed closely in its tracks, climbing by 2.8% and 2.7% respectively; the Dow recorded its third-biggest point gain in its history on Monday. This positive shift in sentiment looks set to continue today, as futures tracking the Dow, S&P and Nasdaq 100 are all currently pointing to a higher open. Asia was a sea of green today as well, with Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Topix surging by 2.65% and 2.75% correspondingly. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng was 0.8% higher. Demand for riskier assets seems to have returned to Europe as well, with futures tracking all the major benchmarks currently flashing green.
  • COMMODITIES: Oil prices are marginally higher today, with both Crude Oil WTI and Brent being up by roughly 0.1%. The main theme driving the oil market appears to be speculation around new sanctions being imposed on Iran soon, which would remove a significant chunk of oil supply from the market. Besides any news on Iran, oil prices will also remain sensitive to changes in risk appetite, any major movements in the dollar, as well as the weekly API crude inventory data due out later today. In precious metals, gold prices surged yesterday, breaking above the $1350 resistance hurdle to currently trade at $1355, even despite the risk-on market environment. The safe haven’s gains are probably owed to the decline in the US dollar yesterday. Since gold is denominated in dollars, it tends to benefit when the greenback depreciates as investors using foreign currencies find it cheaper to buy the yellow metal.