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2022 09 29T061237Z 1 LYNXMPEI8S099 RTROPTP 4 BRITAIN ECONOMY 1
2022 09 29T061237Z 1 LYNXMPEI8S099 RTROPTP 4 BRITAIN ECONOMY 1

Dollar dishes the pain as selloff rumbles on


By Marc Jones

LONDON (Reuters) – Investors pedalled into another cycle of selling on Thursday as the dollar tightened its stranglehold on currency markets, recession fears sapped equities and bonds suffered more interest rate pain.

Europe’s morning was rough. The STOXX 600 share index was still down 1.3% having opened 2% lower, Wall Street looked set to drop and the euro and the pound, hammered over the last week by UK debt concerns, were struggling again. [.EU][/FRX]

China currency intervention expectations were building too, while Europe watched German inflation soar to nearly 11% for the first time since the 1950s and Russia formally proclaim more of Ukraine as its territory.

British Gilt selling had also resumed a day after the Bank of England had dramatically intervened to try and quell the storm surround the UK government’s new spending plans. [GVD/EUR]

“The market wouldn’t mind some stability, it has become a little bit unpredictable,” said Barings Investment Institute’s Chief European strategist, Agnes Belaisch.

She said investors were now seeing “incoherence” in the UK with government spending big as the BoE tries to rein in inflation, while everywhere else the focus is on how high central banks are prepared to go with interest rates.

Germany’s 10-year government bond yield, the benchmark of the euro zone, jumped as high as 2.27%, as pacey numbers from North Rhine-Westphalia signalled the 10.9% inflation figure for the country as a whole that came later.

The UK 10-year gilt yield, which drives UK borrowing costs, rose 15 bps to 4.16% after falling almost 50 bps the day before due to the BoE’s sudden intervention, although the 30-year yield being targeted by the central bank did see another dip.

UK Prime Minister Liz Truss defended her new economic programme that has sent sterling to a record low this week and left the UK’s borrowing costs close to Greece’s – saying it was designed to tackle the difficult situation Britain was now in.

“We are facing difficult economic times,” Truss, who only took over as UK Prime Minister this month, said on local BBC radio. “I don’t deny this. This is a global problem. But what is absolutely right is the UK government has stepped in and acted.”

‘BIT OF A MESS’

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Zooming back out, it was still about the dollar which has crushed currencies virtually everywhere this year, as well as the impact of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Speaking with reporters in London on Wednesday, veteran Federal Reserve policymaker Charles Evans gave no indication that any of the recent FX and bond market drama would blow the U.S. central bank off its rate hike course.

“We just really need to get inflation in check,” Evans said, backing lifting the Fed’s rates – now at 3%-3.25% – to a range of 4.5%-4.75% by the end of the year or March.

Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland President Loretta Mester echoed that on Thursday, saying she didn’t see distress in U.S. financial markets that would alter the central bank’s campaign..

FX market moves saw the U.S. dollar index, which measures the currency against sterling, the euro and four other peers, rise back towards its recent 20-year high again having had its worst session in 2-1/2 years on Wednesday. [/FRX]

Overnight, China’s yuan had fallen again too, although it stayed just off recent post-financial crisis lows, as China’s central bank said stabilising the foreign exchange market was its top priority and on reports of potential FX intervention too. [CNY/]

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan ended the day virtually flat, although Japan’s Nikkei did manage a near 1% rise. [.T]

S&P 500 futures pointed to Wall Street falling as much as 1% later with more Fed policymakers also due to speak. [.N]

The interest rates investors now get on the government’s Treasury bonds – which are considered virtually risk-free if held to maturity – now dwarf the S&P 500’s dividend yield. [.N]

Weekly jobless claims data bucked expectations with an unexpected fall showing how tight labor market remains. U.S. GDP fell at an unrevised 0.6% annualized rate last quarter, the government said in its third estimate of GDP. The economy contracted at a 1.6% rate in the first quarter.

Recession angst combined with supply issues and the strong dollar meant oil prices see-sawed after gaining more than $3 in the prior session. [O/R]

Goldman Sachs cut its 2023 oil price forecast this week, citing expectations of weaker demand and a stronger U.S. dollar, but said global supply issues reinforced its long-term view that prices could rise again.

Brent crude futures were last up at $89.82 a barrel, having dropped to $87.33 per barrel earlier, while U.S. crude futures hovered at $82.30 and gold fell 0.6% to $1,649 an ounce.

“It’s all a bit of a mess,” said ANZ economist Finn Robinson.

($1 = 0.9252 pounds)

(Reporting by Marc Jones; Editing by Andrew Heavens and Toby Chopra)

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