Investing.com — Tech stocks are set to open with a rebound after Monday’s heavy sell-off. The Treasury kicks off three days of big bond sales, and China’s stock market woes continue as the government confirms its focus on deleveraging this year. Here’s what you need to know in financial markets on Tuesday, March 9th.
1 Three days of Treasury sales
The U.S. Treasury kicks off a three-day sale of bonds that will provide a stern test of the market’s appetite for the deluge of issuance that will be needed to fund the $1.9 trillion stimulus package.
The Treasury will auction $58 billion of three-year notes later, posting results of the sale at 1 PM ET (1800 GMT). It also intends to sell $38 billion of 10-year notes on Wednesday and $24 billion of 30-year bonds on Thursday.
Longer-dated yields have come off their recent highs smartly as foreign investors in particular have been drawn to the premiums on offer relative to other safe assets. That also drove the dollar index to a three-month high late Monday, with gains against traditional lower-yielders such as the yen and Swiss franc. However, those gains have largely unwound in European morning trading, as a measure of risk appetite returned. The dollar index was down 0.4% at 91.997.
2 Chinese rout continues despite state intervention
The heavy selling in Chinese financial markets continued, despite reported intervention by a handful of big state-backed investment funds looking to stem the rout.
The tech heavy Shanghai Shenzhen CSI 300 and Chinext indices fell 2.2% and 3.5%, taking their losses over the last month to more than 20%, amid fresh signs that the government wants to withdraw some fiscal and monetary support.
The government’s work report said that deleveraging will be one of five major tasks this year, mitigating the explosion in debt that followed the pandemic. Overall debt has risen by 30% in the last year, according to Bank for International Settlements data, with the corporate sector alone owing over 160% of GDP – more than twice the ratio in the U.S.
The government also said last week it wanted to cut its own borrowing this year, to 3.2% of GDP from 3.6% last year.
3. Tech stocks set for rebound; OECD hikes growth outlook
U.S. stock markets are set to open higher later, with the Nasdaq set to outperform for once after again being the focus of selling on Monday.
By 6:30 AM ET (1130 GMT), Nasdaq 100 futures were up 2.4%, effectively mirroring the 2.4% drop in the Nasdaq Composite yesterday. Dow Jones futures meanwhile were extending their gains, rising 185 points, or 0.6%, while S&P 500 futures were up 1.1%.
The rotation out of tech names into value has not yet led to any overall easing of global stock valuations: the MSCI World equity index stands at 82% of world GDP, 10 percentage points above where it was in the fourth quarter of 1999, at the height of the tech bubble. However, that ratio may look better if world GDP grows this year as expected: the OECD raised its forecast for world GDP growth to 5.6% this year from 4.2% in November. The difference was largely down to the U.S. $1.9 trillion stimulus package, the think-tank said.
4. Euro recovers, helped by data, vaccine news
Europe’s economy fared slightly less badly at the end of last year than thought, according to data released on Tuesday that showed marginal upward revisions to both gross domestic product and employment.
The data were largely ignored but the euro has in any case enjoyed a bounce overnight after slumping in recent sessions due to the widening yield gap with the U.S.
On Monday, data released by the European Central Bank showed that the ECB had actually slowed its bond purchases last week, when the jitters in global bond markets drove yields higher. By 6:30 AM ET, the EUR/USD was up 0.6% at $1.1913.
Prospects for a European recovery have been helped somewhat by Germany’s announcement of plans to drastically speed up its vaccination campaign, while Italy, which blocked the export of AstraZeneca (NASDAQ:AZN) vaccines to Australia last week, will start hosting the manufacture of Russia’s Sputnik vaccine under license by a Swiss company, Prime Minister Mario Draghi said. There was also good news on vaccines in the U.S., where the NY Post reported that the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine is effective against the Brazilian strain of the Covid-19 virus, in addition to the U.K. and South African strains.
5 Oil resilient, copper not so much
The overnight weakness in China hit commodity prices, but crude oil shook off the weakness after the OECD’s forecast, while industrial metals were left underperforming.
By 6:35 AM ET, U.S. crude futures were up 1.3% at $65.91 a barrel, while Brent crude was up 1.5%.
By contrast, copper futures again tested the $4/lb level and were still down 1.4% at $4.0370. A Reuters analysis of last month’s import data showed that imports of copper and Iron ore are slowing despite a deceptively strong year-on-year comparison.
The American Petroleum Institute will release its weekly inventory data as usual later at 4:30 PM ET.
Source: Economy - investing.com