Kabul Fills Jackson Hole

 | Aug 27, 2021 12:34AM ET

by Adam Button

The ink was barely dry on the rising yields narrative before news of two explosions in Kabul killing 12 US servicemen and over 13 US afghans brought down equities and bond yields, pushing geopolotical risks in front. As Ashraf indicated, geopolitical risks weigh on markets when US interests (human/material) are at stake. The last time this happened was in January 2020 when US soldiers were killed during the events in Iran. The US dollar is stronger against all currencies, with the yen the least weak and CAD the weakest. US initial jobless claims edged up while the 2nd reading of Q2 GDP edged lower. We should also mention how US yields initially shot up as a result of hawkish comments from the 3 Fed members (Kaplan, Bullar and George), vowing to taper in Q3 regardless of virus cases.