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Stocks Crash, Euro Cracks And Risk Currencies Tumble

Published 06/11/2020, 04:58 PM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM
U.S. stocks sold off for the third day in a row, and today’s losses were the sharpest. The Dow Jones Industrial Average tumbled 6.9%, or 1,800 points, the biggest one-day drop in three months. Risk aversion was in full swing, with currencies falling across the board and oil dropping by its largest amount in two months. The U.S. dollar traded sharply higher on safe-haven flows. The Australian dollar was hit the hardest, with the Canadian and New Zealand dollars trailing not far behind. Sterling also fell sharply and surprisingly the euro was the most resilient, but it also succumbed to end-of-day losses. There’s wasn’t one, but many, catalysts for the meltdown in stocks. Instead, the lack of additional stimulus from the Fed, Chairman Jerome Powell’s cautiously optimistic tone, profit-taking and worries about a second wave of coronavirus cases after spikes in Texas, Arizona and California all contributed to the decline.  
 
The fear of a second wave is real. COVID cases are increasing in 21 states, with 14 seeing new highs. Florida reported its largest single-day increase in coronavirus since the pandemic began. The same was true for Texas, which reported more than 2,500 new cases, and in Arizona, cases have risen 49% from May 26 to June 9. That’s 14 days (the incubation period of COVID-19) after Memorial Day. Anyone who thinks that the U.S. has won the battle against COVID is wrong and, in states where the curve has been flattening, like New York, it still remains to be seen whether protests have shifted the trend. Powell warned yesterday that if a second wave happens locally, it could hamper the economy, so he doesn’t know for sure if the labor market bottomed.
 
Investors sought safety in the U.S. dollar, driving the greenback higher against all of the major currencies with the exception of other safe-havens like the Japanese Yen and Swiss Franc. The sell-off in USD/JPY and USD/CHF are consistent with the slide in stocks and Treasury yields. Weekly jobless claims and the producer price index had very little impact on the greenback. PPI rose more than expected in May, but excluding the recovery in energy prices and food prices, PPI fell for the second month in a row. Jobless claims were slightly lower, with 1.5 million new benefit filings, down from 1.89 million the prior week and from the 6.89 million peak at the end of March. The University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index is scheduled for release tomorrow and, given the rally in stocks up to this week and state reopenings, we expect further improvements in sentiment.
 
Unlike other currencies that have experienced sharp declines today, the euro’s losses are more moderate in comparison. It's hard to pinpoint the specific catalyst for the euro. It could be the continued reopenings, the relaxation of travel bans or the lack of meaningful upticks in new infections in Europe as restrictions ease. Eurozone industrial production is due for release tomorrow and a deeper decline is expected. We continue to look for a correction in EUR/USD, especially if stocks continue to fall as the move becomes overstretched.
 
The Australian and New Zealand dollars were hit the hardest by risk aversion. Unlike the U.S., both countries have effectively flattened the curve. Only nine cases were reported in Australia today, while New Zealand has had only seven cases in the last month and zero in the past week. Yet, these currencies are extremely sensitive to the market’s tolerance for risk, particularly after strong moves in May and June. Tensions between China and Australia are heating up, with China telling Australia to take a hard look at their current problems. China is punishing Australia for questioning Beijing for allowing the spread of COVID-19. It instituted tariffs on barely and put an almost A$38-billion education revenue stream at risk. The Canadian dollar also fell sharply on the back of sharp declines in crude prices. USD/CAD broke above 1.35, enjoying its strongest rally in more than a month.
 
Sterling is in focus tomorrow, with UK monthly GDP, industrial product and the trade balance scheduled for release. Considering that these are April data, when manufacturing PMI hit a record low, the risk is to the downside for these reports.

Latest comments

USD/JPY is above 200 SMA.  Clearly it is bullish.
I was looking to get in a china etf. What do you guys think of Kure? Im a very small investor. Lol
Thank you Kay!
Thanks for the clear analysis and what to watch for today
Can anyone please explain what caused the low crude oil prices ? Thanks
Cheers Kathy , thanks
I'm usually here for the comments lol
You said, and I quote: "COVID cases are increasing in 21 states, with 14 seeing new highs." Could this sudden spike in cases be attributable to the recent (or ongoing?) public protests in many US states?
Spike is not happening in cities where there are more protests
No. It takes 4 weeks before you’ll see the effect of the protests. This rise it the result of opening to early that started 4 weeks behind. Both are going to result in new cases and a spike. I can’t believe this is all happening in the USA. It is as if nobody cares anymore about anything. Only politics.
Spike?  Check the total new case in https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/ US new case is only 124 and Singapore is 463.  Spike? where?
thanks you very much
Awesome análysis.Thank you Kathy
Kathy I really enjoy reading your articles. Much better than BULLISH Monika who is completely out of touch. Thank you
The media tells you 49% increase or largest day increase but do not give you actual numbers. Five cases could be a 49% increase. Who knows. Floridas larges single day increase? How many 10-15? No reason to send the country inro another panic. People please open your eyes.
Umm... new cases in florida ytd was 1,698
Thank you for a great and useful analysis of the market. The conclusion is mainly buy USD sell the rest of the world. GDP will also develop better in the US than most other countries and regions.
So the market is down that means
Maybe the riots are leading to the increase in virus cases. That's what happens when you loot stores and break things, you get the virus.
Same in Oz with all these protests; give it a fortnight and 'the curve' might not look so flat.
The rising cases we're seeing now started before the protests and, if you look at the regions where they're occurring, you'll see there's no correlation.  The protests probably will cause an increase but that will only start to show next week. If you're a trader, you really should pay more attention to reality (not Fox News).
What should or could be done ?
The entire Asian market is going to bleed tomorrow that to on a Friday
trading not for Coward people...u need to accept loosing..before gaining it....
Sometimes, you need a longer time-frame. A loss is only a loss if you close a position at a loss. If you're confident that your position will become profitable with time, leave it until that happens. - Preserve capital!
creating Panic like anything...
well just normal pull back 😉
How can corona scare investors? the world knows it is a sham!
Is that right Dr.Bee!
Yes, Baba Bee. Keep your foil hat on and you'll be safe from their mind-probes.
DXY? Weakness
So NOW you tell me!
what do you think about Eur/Jpy?
Its the same as eur/usd
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