Traders Want Return Of Their Equity As Trade War Hits

 | May 13, 2019 12:48AM ET

Any good-will to risk assets on Friday has faded through Asia, and there the preservation of capital is the overriding theme, although there is absolutely no panic. The market was clearly wrong-footed during the many months where the narrative was that trade talks were progressing and a deal was imminent. Although the fact central banks are far more flexible than in Q4, when many were signalling tighter monetary policies, seems to be curbing the upside in implied volatility here.

What we are witnessing now can be only described as a schmozzle, with the war of words heating up from both camps and media. Trump detailing that we are here as China walked away, going onto say, "I think that China felt they were being beaten so badly in the recent negotiation that they may as well wait around for the next election, 2020, to see if they could get lucky & have a Democrat win." Punchy stuff and that would have been aimed squarely at VC Liu He et al., and the psychology that there is no middle ground here and that one party will win, the other loses – and, this is how it is being sold to the voters.

At the same time, the China People Daily have joined the Global Times with defiant rhetoric, with calls that the ”US OBSTRUCTS PROGRESS ON BILATERAL TRADE TALKS”. There would be little doubt that sentiment in the mainland would be moving against the US here, and markets will feed off this.

The fact Vice Premier Liu He has provided three conditions required for China to come back to the table could be construed as positive, and we understand Xi and Trump will meet at the June G20 meeting in Osako, a stage they have form, where the prior trade truce was forged in the November G20 meeting in Argentina. That said, if we consider the three criteria (detailed by Liu He), these being; the removal of additional tariffs, a balanced tone in the narrative to ensure the ‘dignity’ of both nations, and defined targets on Chinese purchases, it actually feels as though we are moving further away from these criteria, not closer.

The focus now falls on any countermeasures from the Chinese and also any specifics around the placement of 25% tariffs on the $325b tranche of Chinese exports. This will mark an escalation of the tensions, with economists having spent the weekend giving their modelling around the sensitivity of each tranche of tariffs on Chinese and US growth, as well as the impact it will have on US core inflation. It doesn’t make encouraging reading. Protectionism and the impact that can have on demand can be hard to model, and it feels that with these dynamics in play the market will further de-risk, with traders wanting a return of their equity, as opposed to on their equity.

One way we can visualise this is through the demand for put options (on the S&P 500) outweighing that of calls, with the skew now at the highest since 24 December. One could argue this is a contrarian indicator, but I am not so sure this time around and reflects a view that traders see the path of least resistance in US equities as lower.

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