TALKING POINTS – YEN, ITALY, EURO, CHINA, AUSTRALIAN DOLLAR
- Yen up, Aussie & NZ Dollars down as APAC markets rethink Italy
- China hint at RRR cut fails to make a lasting dent in risk aversion
- FTSE 100[1], S&P 500[2] futures hint sentiment is likely to sour further
Risk aversion returned with a vengeance in Asia Pacific trade as local bourses took stock of Europe’s response to ongoing in Italy. News that President Sergio Mattarella blocked the appointment of a eurosceptic to the Economy Ministry was celebrated[3] until Europe came online Monday, with traders seemingly happy to see anti-EU populism checked.
That swiftly changed once Euro-area exchanges came online however. The spread between Italian 10-year bond yields and German equivalents – a measure of the extra risk in lending to Rome versus Berlin – jumped to the highest in over four years. The Euro[4] plunged alongside the Euro Stoxx 50 equities benchmark, which shed a hefty 1.2 percent.
Today, APAC investors seem resigned to let Europe set the tone. Regional shares are down over 0.7 percent. A pause following reports in state-directed media that China is mulling a reserve requirement rate (RRR) cut to boost near-term liquidity proved fleeting. The anti-risk Japanese Yen[5] is leading the way higher while the sentiment-linked Australian and New Zealand Dollars are on the defensive.
Looking ahead, a lull in big-splash event risk seems likely to keep broader risk appetite trends at the forefront. US consumer confidence data and a speech from St Louis Fed President James Bullard, a well-known dove, are unlikely to