War Rhetoric Has Dollar, Bonds And Gold Bid, Stocks Lower

 | Aug 09, 2017 06:29AM ET

Wednesday August 9: Five things the markets are talking about

Capital Markets are on the defence as a risk-off tone dominates proceedings overnight, with gold ($1,268.34) and the Japanese yen (¥109.70) advancing and sovereign bond prices edging higher as tension grows between the U.S and North Korea.

Gold prices are heading for its largest gain this month while JPY and CHF remain the biggest winners among G-10 currency pairs after President Trump issued a warning yesterday that if North Korea escalates the nuclear threat, “they will be met with fire and fury like the world has never seen.” Global equities are slumping while oil prices retreat on ‘oversupply’ concerns.

In retaliation, North Korean’s state-run media issued a statement saying, “U.S war hysteria will bring a miserable end.” The market is concerned that North Korea could strike before any preemptive attack by the U.S.

Note: North Korea said it was examining an operational plan for firing a ballistic missile toward Guam, a U.S territory in the Pacific Ocean.

1. Stocks Sea of red

In Japan, the Nikkei skidded to a 2-1/2 month low on rising North Korea risk. The index dropped -1.3% overnight, the weakest closing level since May 31, but defence equipment makers attracted buyers. The broader Topix Japan’s TOPIX index fell -1.1%, the most since May 18.

In Hong Kong, shares ended lower, but developers provided support. The Hang Seng index fell -0.4%, easing away from its two-year high print on Tuesday, while the China Enterprises Index lost -1.1%.

In China, financials dragged stock markets lower amid concerns that regulators will continue to clamp down on debt risks, but strong gains in consumer staples left major indexes only slightly lower on the day. The blue-chip CSI300 was unchanged, while the Shanghai Composite Index dipped -0.2%.

The outlier was Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index resisted the region-wide downward trend to add +0.4%.

Note: The CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) closed at 10.96, its highest in about a month, while the CBOE SKEW INDEX, or “black swan” index, which measures the likelihood of extreme moves in the S&P 500 based on how traders are pricing the index’s options is at 140.03 ahead of the U.S open. In July, it traded mostly between 120-140.

In Europe, regional bourses have opened down and have continued in the same direction ahead of the open stateside. Gold is higher, but is not translating into support for materials.

U.S stocks are set to open deep in the red (-0.3%).

Indices: Stoxx50 -1.1% at 3,476, FTSE -0.6% at 7,496, DAX -1.0% at 12,168, CAC 40 -1.2% at 5,155, IBEX 35 -0.9% at 10,643, FTSE MIB -1.1% at 21,809, SMI -1.3% at 9,040, S&P 500 Futures -0.3%

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