Risk Sentiment Increasing, But Asian Equity Markets Consolidating

 | Jul 20, 2015 01:49AM ET

Risk sentiment seems to be increasing, although Asian equity market seem to be consolidating somewhat today.

Traders spent much of last week unwinding downside protective hedges in various markets as a number of macro headwinds abate and the focus falls firmly on earnings and growing central bank divergence. For the first time in a while, we saw almost every Asian market (including Australia) rally on the week and I continue to hold a risk positive bias in developed equities this week. This also led to the biggest weekly fall in the VIX index since it came into operation in 1990. With Greece off the front pages for now amid Alexis Tsipras achieving a €7.16 billion loan via the EFSM and a new bailout friendly government in play, we have seen the market price out the risk premium. On top of this the People’s Bank of China have continued market supportive measures even though the market was stabilising and US corporates are also beating low ball estimates.

The talk of the day though has been centred squarely on gold. There was significant technical damage to the gold market on Friday as price traded through the March (and November 2014) low of $1,143 and stops were triggered. Clearly, there have been a few players wanting to exit longs in Asian trade and when price traded through Friday’s low we have seen gold undergo what can really only be described as its mini ‘flash crash’ with spot gold trading falling $49 to a low of $1,080. Talk from one local bank has been that five tonnes was dumped onto the Shanghai exchange, which is a huge order regardless of the time of day.