Opening Bell: Oil Surges, Euro Slides, Stocks Mixed On Korea Threat

 | Sep 26, 2017 06:23AM ET

by Pinchas Cohen
h2 Key Events/h2

  • North Korea says US talk, “declaration of war”
  • Cross-market risk-off sentiment takes hold, perhaps first time this year
  • Fed argues whether low inflation is temporary
  • Merkel coalition struggle bad for euro, good for stocks
  • Oil reaches 5-month high, on threat of Turkish supply disruption
h3 North Korea Tensions Mount/h3

The war drums are sounding louder, as bellicose rhetoric appears to be catching fire on both sides of the Pacific. While the world is used to a certain amount of sabre rattling from North Korea, it's unusual to hear it coming from the US.

The ongoing Kim Jong Un vs Donald Trump chest-thumping has taken on something of a prissy, he-said-no-he-said dynamic. The isolated Asian country’s foreign minister, Ri Yong Ho, speaking last night in New York, asserted that US President Trump had declared war on North Korea and therefore the rogue Asian state has the right to shoot down US jets – a statement that in and of itself might be considered a declaration of war by most countries. The White House, naturally, denies this allegation.

While North Korea has claimed in the past that the US declared war on Pyongyang, the fact that US warplanes deliberately flew near North Korea's coastline this past Saturday, along with South Korea stepping up its live-fire tests, renders the potential for a possible conflagration more viable. A mistake in the field by a commander – on either side – could turn a small incident into something much more serious. Even China’s ambassador to the UN told Reuters the situation is “getting too dangerous.”

h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

For perhaps the first time this year, all market players appear to be in agreement as cross-market, risk-off sentiment takes hold. High-growth, high-risk assets such as metals and stocks led by the technology sector have sold off, as Treasury yields declined. G-10 currencies, except for the traditional havens the yen and Swissy, have also slipped.

Declines among Asian stocks remained muted this morning, as investors relied on the US's continued efforts in pursuit of denuclearization through diplomatic channels. Markets participants continue to remain steadfast in their focus on upcoming comments from central bank policy makers, as they continue to try and drown out the noise from back-and-forth “He started it!” NK-US rhetoric.

Investors will attempt to listen to the Fed’s soft argument on whether to raise US interest rates again this year – as Dudley sees low inflation as temporary and the Fed should therefore stay on its interest-rate track, while Evens is concern it reflects structural forces and the Fed should therefore put hikes on hold- as they attempt to turn a deaf ear to the cacophonous argument of who said what about a nuclear war. Traders are betting on a 60-percent chance on an interest rate increase in December, to follow the March and June hikes.

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