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MORNING BID AMERICAS-Bonds bowl over the pins, IMF forecasts due
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MORNING BID AMERICAS-Bonds bowl over the pins, IMF forecasts due
Oct 22, 2024 12:04 PM

A look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike

Dolan

U.S. Treasuries are starting to balk at post-election fiscal

prospects and the resulting spike in benchmark borrowing rates

has knocked stock markets off their perch and lifted the dollar

to its best level since early August.

Ten-year Treasury yields zoomed higher again on

Tuesday, topping 4.2% for the first time in three months.

On one level, there's been some further dialling back of

Federal Reserve easing expectations - with an implied 'terminal

rate' for the whole Fed easing cycle backing up close to 3.5%

next year and less than 150 basis points from the current policy

rate.

The robust performance of the economy is mainly responsible

for that, as is the steady stream of Fed officials speaking of

only 'modest' rate cuts ahead. Trepidation about market-based

long-term inflation expectations

troughing as high as 2.3%-2.5% is also starting to shift the

horizon somewhat.

But investors are mostly focussed now on next month's

election and the absence of any plan from either party to rein

in budget deficits already well north of 6% of GDP. What's more,

betting markets now lean toward the candidate - Donald Trump -

most likely to aggravate that fiscal position and bookmaker bets

on a Republican clean sweep of Congress are rising too.

Reflecting some of those concerns, the New York Fed's

estimate of the 10-year Treasury 'term premium' - a key measure

of the compensation investors demand to hold long-term

government debt securities - has risen to its highest level of

the year, at more than 14 bps. It's been negative for most of

the year.

BlackRock boss Larry Fink repeated his warnings about the

deficit situation at an event on Monday, saying rising

government debt was a 'big problem' and both parties were guilty

for the widening deficits.

The back-up in Treasury yields this week has lifted the

dollar index to its best levels since August 2, with

currency markets also parsing the implications of Trump's

sweeping trade tariff plans.

Goldman Sachs said on Tuesday the euro could fall as

much as 10% - implying a drop below $1.0 from current levels -

in a scenario in which Trump imposes widespread tariffs and cuts

domestic taxes if he returns to the White House.

A 10% global tariff and 20% levy on Chinese imports,

combined with the stimulus of domestic tax cuts, could cause the

dollar to rally sharply and the euro to drop 8% to 10%,

Goldman's Michael Cahill told clients.

Although the euro regained some footing, the dollar

continued to push higher above 150 yen as Japan's weekend

election is eyed by markets. The Canadian dollar was also

on the back foot ahead of a possible jumbo 50bp rate cut from

the Bank of Canada on Wednesday.

With election and debt worries, geopolitical angst and

longer-term inflation questions as a spur, gold continued

to probe higher - though remained just shy of intraday records

set at $2740 on Monday.

The bond market rumbling has been enough to knock Wall

Street stocks back from new records, although the

tech-heavy Nasdaq outperformed and made some gains ahead of

megacap corporate earnings later this month. Futures were mostly

in the red ahead of Tuesday's open, however.

Much of the macro world will be focussed on the

International Monetary Fund's annual meeting in Washington, with

the IMF's latest World Economic Outlook due for release later

and multiple top central bank officials speaking around the

event.

Overseas, Japan's Nikkei ended down more than 1%

despite the weaker yen, and Chinese stocks were

mostly flat. Europe was lower too.

In corporate developments, there was good news in the tech

sector from SAP, whose shares rose 5% after the German

software company raised full-year targets on strong cloud

business.

And HSBC Holdings ( HSBC ) said on Tuesday it would combine

some of its commercial and investment banking operations in a

major overhaul under new CEO Georges Elhedery. A new leadership

structure, which includes the appointment of Pam Kaur as the

lender's first female chief financial officer, will carve up its

operations into four business lines - Britain, Hong Kong,

corporate and institutional banking, and wealth banking.

Key developments that should provide more direction to U.S.

markets later on Tuesday:

* US corporate earnings: Texas Instruments, General Motors,

General Electric, Verizon, Baker Hughes, Enphase Energy,

Packaging Corp of America, Invesco, CoStar, Seagate Technology,

Paccar, Fiserv, 3M, Moody's, Quest Diagnostics, Pentair,

Pultegroup, Sherwin Williams, Danaher, Freeport-McMoRan,

Interpublic, Norfolk Southern, RTX, Genuine Parts, AO Smith

* International Monetary Funds releases World Economic Outlook

at IMF-World Bank Annual Meetings in Washington; European

Central Bank President Christine Lagarde, ECB chief economist

Philip Lane and Bank of Portugal governor Mario Centeno all

speak; Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey, deputy governor

Sarah Breedon and BoE policymaker Megan Greene all speak

* Richmond Federal Reserve's October business surveys; Canada

September producer prices

* Philadelphia Federal Reserve President Patrick Harker speaks

(Editing by Christina Fincher

[email protected])

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