ORLANDO, Florida, May 18 (Reuters) - Stocks mostly
retreated on Monday as a deepening global bond rout drove yields
to historic highs, darkening the economic outlook and casting a
shadow over the AI rally ahead of Nvidia's quarterly earnings
report later in the week.
In my column today, I look at an acute problem suddenly
facing the Fed and other G4 central banks as inflation takes
off: negative real interest rates. They are highly stimulative,
the last thing policymakers need right now.
If you have more time to read, here are a few articles I
recommend to help you make sense of what happened in markets
today.
1. Global bond rout deepens as Iran war drags on and
underscores inflation fears
2. A new day at the Fed, but policy forecast cloudy for
Warsh, Trump, US
3. G7 finance chiefs seek to tackle imbalances in wake
of bond selloff
4. Citi partners with BlackRock's HPS for $17.5 billion
private credit program
5. Samsung Electronics and union extend talks to avert
strike threatening global supply chains
Today's Key Market Moves
* STOCKS: Japan -1%, Australia -1.5%; UK +1%, Europe
+0.5%. S&P 500 and Nasdaq in the red, Dow +0.3%.
* SECTORS/SHARES: Four S&P 500 sectors fall, seven rise.
Tech -1%, energy +1.8%. Philly semiconductor index -2.5%, Micron
Technology -6%, Nvidia -1.3%. Dominion Energy +9.5%, 3M +4%.
* FX: Dollar index hits 6-week high then closes lower
for the first time in six days. Sterling biggest G10 gainer.
Bitcoin down for fourth day.
* BONDS: Long bonds tumble - 30-year JGB yield highest
ever, 30-year Bund yield highest since 2011, 30-year UK gilt
yield hits highest since 1998. Treasuries close relatively flat.
* COMMODITIES/METALS: Oil rises, gold +0.5%.
Today's Talking Points
* Bond alarm rings louder
U.S. and many other developed economy bond yields closed
lower on Monday, but not before leaping to fresh historic highs
as investors served policymakers with another reminder of how
they view the inflation outlook. And it isn't pretty.
At the short end, rate hike expectations are intensifying,
and further out the curve long bond yields are the highest in
decades as inflation expectations risk becoming unanchored.
Japan's long bond yields have never been higher. The mix of
energy shock, supply constraints and fiscal worries is taking
its toll. Can central bankers get the genie back in the bottle?
* China's domestic issues
China's economic data dump for April was a "particularly
concerning reality check," according to Barclays. Retail sales,
industrial production and demand for loans were all softer than
expected, putting Asia's largest economy on a weak footing at
the start of the second quarter.
Barclays economists note three particular areas of concern:
slowing industrial production, despite strong export growth; the
sharp deterioration in household consumption; intensifying
household deleveraging, resulting in the largest net loan
repayments on record. All point to weak domestic demand.
* Counting the cost
Unless a permanent resolution is reached within the next 10
days, the Iran war will soon enter its fourth month. The hit to
companies has been felt most in soaring oil and energy prices,
but the impact goes deeper and wider.
A Reuters review of 279 corporate statements across the
U.S., Europe and Asia finds that companies' bill has already
reached at least $25 billion - and it is rising. To put that in
context, hundreds of companies by last October had flagged more
than $35 billion in costs from President Donald Trump's 2025
tariffs. Add in surging bond yields, and corporate profitability
is coming under pressure.
What could move markets tomorrow?
* Developments in the Middle East
* Australia consumer sentiment (May)
* Japan GDP (Q1, prelim)
* European Central Bank's Philip Lane and Claudia Buch speak
* Euro zone trade (March)
* UK unemployment (March)
* Bank of England Deputy Governor for Financial Stability
Sarah Breeden speaks
* Canada inflation (April)
* U.S. Federal Reserve officials scheduled to speak include
Governor Christopher Waller, Philadelphia Fed President Anna
Paulson, Atlanta Fed interim President Cheryl Venable
Want to receive Trading Day in your inbox every weekday
morning? Sign up for my newsletter here.
Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not
reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust
Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom
from bias.