Yields Jump, Greenback Is Bid

 | Mar 28, 2022 06:29AM ET

Yields were surging. Canada and Australia's two-year yields have jumped 20 bp, with the US yield up 10 bp to 2.37% ahead of the $50 bln sale later today. The US 10-year yield rose a more modest three basis points to 2.50%, flattening the 2-10-year yield curve. The 5–30-year curve inverted for the first time since 2016. European 10-year benchmark yields rose 3-7 bp.

Tech stocks helped power the Hang Seng and Australia eked out a small gain, but most equity markets in the Asia Pacific region sold off for third consecutive session. Led by financials, utilities, and communication, the Stoxx 600 rose by about 0.75% in the European morning. US futures were trading with a heavier bias.

The greenback was firm, with the Japanese yen again under the most pressure. It was trading briefly above JPY125 in late morning activity in Europe, before pulling back. The Australian dollar was the only major currency higher on the day. Emerging market currencies were mostly lower. The South Korean won, and Thai baht were hardest hit alongside the Polish zloty.

The jump in yields took some shine off gold, which reached $1966 last week. It was straddling the $1930 area. The $1900 area may offer important support. The lockdown in Shanghai was sparking concerns about oil demand. May WTI was off almost 4% after last week's 10.5% rally. There was also speculation (hope) that OPEC+ will agree to boost output at this week's meeting.

US natural gas prices were little changed after rising in every session last week. Europe's benchmark rose by a little more than 8% today after falling 2.4% last week. Iron ore was a little firmer, while copper was falling for the third session in a row. May wheat was offered, giving back 2.4% after last week's 3.6% a rally.

h2 Asia Pacific/h2

The Bank of Japan entered the market to reinforce the 0.25% cap of the 10-year yield. Its first offer to buy an unlimited amount of bonds failed to draw any interest. The second attempt had to buy JPY64.5 bln (~$525 mln). The BOJ recognized it was engaged in a struggle now and pre-announced that it will be there for the next three sessions. Separately, we noted that according to the latest Nikkei poll, support for Prime Minister Kishida had risen six percentage points to 61%, with high marks given for handling the Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

On the one hand, China rejected the sanction regime against Russia, it said, because it was being imposed with a UN resolution. On the other hand, reports suggested that Beijing and mainland companies were asking US officials for clarification with the idea in mind to understand what was permitted. China and India purchases, for example, of Russian oil were not violating the sanctions.

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There was thought that China would abandon its strict zero-COVID course. Some suggested that the easing of restrictions in Hong Kong could be a prelude to a change by Beijing. However, that did not appear to be the case. Yesterday, Beijing announced a lockdown of Shanghai, China's largest city (population estimated around 25 mln).

The eastern half of city will be locked down for four days starting today. This covered the financial district. The purpose was mass testing. The western half of the city will be locked down as of Apr. 1. Residents will be barred from leaving home and public transportation and ride-hailing services will be halted. A record 5500 cases were said to have been reported on Saturday. Recall that earlier this month, Shenzhen, an important tech hub was locked down.