A Rough Day For Emerging Markets

 | Sep 14, 2016 03:08AM ET

Despite limited moves in Asia Market yesterday, one could cut the tension on APAC trading desks with a knife as dealers were busy rethinking strategies within this complex Central calculus.

As expected, yesterday’s Brainard bounce in Bond and Equity sentiment was short lived as both markets sold off again overnight, but adding to the equity market woes was a new IEA forecast that indicates the oil supply bulge would last longer than previously expected, given weak global demand.

The lack of near-term easing stance by the G-3 central bankers is weighing on risk sentiment. The markets are finally coming to the realization that the central banks are now at a point of diminishing returns from QE. We are witnessing the fallout in some asset markets that are extremely vulnerable to a potential pullback of the exceptional QE measures from both Europe and Japan.

The Central Bank easy-money policies and its unprecedented bond-buying program have pushed investors into risky assets and have helped jolt asset prices higher, but it is an entirely different ballgame when Central Banks start reducing these measures and we may only be witnessing the tip of the iceberg at this point. The renewed equity weakness and steeping yield curves is a pretty toxic mix for a market accustomed to summer complacency.

As the G-3 Central Bank “Game of Thrones” theme unfolds, I think that forex markets will continue to be driven short term by equity and bond market movements amidst the broader risk aversion play. We are in for a bumpy ride through next week’s FOMC.

Australian Dollar

Yesterday’s timid Australian Dollar bounce, post dovish Brainard, was the first sign of the shifting dynamic in risk assets where traders are moving from a buying the dip, to sell the rally mentality. With equity markets looking shaky overnight, traders pounced on the risk currencies at the slightest hint of risk aversion, which saw the Aussie dollar plumb to .7445.