Japan’s stock market took another huge hit last night taking the
Nikkei index down 6.0% and now trading in bearish territory. The
reaction sent the US stock indexes down and dropped the 10 yr note yield to 2.18%.
Europe’s stock markets also were it hard on the Japanese selling. US economic
data at 8:30 stopped the global slide in stock markets although Europe is still
weaker; US stock indexes at 9:00 were pointing to an unchanged opening and the
improvement in the bond market lost much of its gains. Weekly jobless claims
were down 12K to 334K, estimates were for claims to have increased 4K to 350K.
May retail sales were expected up 0.5%, sales increased 0.6%; excluding autos
sales were expected +0.4%, sales increased 0.3%. Also at 8:30 May export prices
declined 0.5%, import prices were down 0.6%, both were expected to be up a
little.
Global stocks fell, sending the benchmark index to a seven-week
low, and the yen strengthened after the World Bank cut its growth forecast. U.S.
equity-index futures stayed lower after a report showed retail sales rose more
than forecast in May. According to the World Bank the global economy will grow
2.2% in 2013, in Jan the Bank forecast growth at 2.4%. More than $2.5 trillion
has been erased from the value of global equities since Fed Chairman Ben S.
Bernanke said May 22 the central bank could scale back stimulus efforts should
the job market show “sustainable improvement.”
At 1:00 Treasury will auction $13B of 30 yr bonds, yesterday the 10 yr
auction didn’t see strong demand.
So far this morning the stock market continues its downward path; for the
first time since last Dec the US stock market has declined three consecutive
days. Expect continued volatility today in the stock and bond market.
Already today increased volatility in the bond market. Prior to
the better retail sales and weekly claims the 10 yr at one point down 6 bps frm
yesterday to 2.17% on the Japan stock market decline. Forecasts of softer
global growth may support the US bond market but unless the US stock market is
perceived to entering a major correction it is unlikely interest rates will
decline much frm present levels. Markets believe the Fed is about to begin
tapering its QE, that may be seen as either good news for stocks or bad news;
good if future economic data improves, bad if data is soft. Next Tuesday and
Wednesday the FOMC will meet, markets looking for some clarity frm the group on
what Bernanke has in mind.
The bond and mortgage market remain technically and fundamentally
bearish. We have hung in on floating but so far no improvement and not
much decline in prices. Unless there is improvement in the next day or so we
will abandon the float suggestion.
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