
(16 March 2020)DAILY MARKET BRIEF 2:Chinese production, sales slump.

Asian stocks were smashed, with Australia’s ASX (-9.70%) taking the biggest hit amid industrial production in China declined 13.5%, fixed
asset investment tanked 24.5% and retail sales fell 20.5% in February, as the coronavirus outbreak paralyzed economic activity in the EM
giant during this month. All three figures were sensibly lower than the analyst expectations of -3%, -2% and -4% respectively. This has been
the first set of hard data, giving investors a gauge of how bad the economy may have been impacted by the pandemic. The People’s Bank of China
held its on-year MLF rate unchanged at 3.15%.
The fact that lower Chinese production will have a severe implication on most
international companies’ operations is now leading to another round of downside valuation in market prices.
And of course, the
spread of the virus to other parts of the world continues paralyzing economies globally and the negative implications will go far beyond a
Chinese-led slowdown.
Due today, the Empire State Manufacturing index is expected to have fallen to 4.40 in March from 12.9 printed a
month earlier. Markets are prepared for a sensibly lower read.
Stocks in Tokyo (-2.46%) lost relatively less than their peers. The CSI
slumped 4.30%, as Hang Seng dropped 4.50%.
Gold tanked to $1504 an ounce during the Friday’s stock rally and jumped to $1575 in the
overnight trading session. Though such violent swings are disturbing for a safe haven asset, chaotic market conditions give little
alternative of rescue to investors.
WTI crude (-3.18%) shortly fell below $30 a barrel. The mounting selling pressure is partly
countered by expectations that the global production would curb naturally if a barrel is exchanged below $30. Most producers would bleed
money near these levels.
The euro rebounded to 1.12 against the greenback after having dipped to 1.1054 on Friday. Cable tanked below
1.23 for the first time since August. The Fed’s surprise Monday move should continue weighing on the US dollar.
Trading on FTSE futures
(-5.21%) hint at a deeply negative start to the week despite a cheap pound. DAX futures (-5.14%) point at further bloodbath in Frankfurt.
Last
week has seen the market volatility ratchet up another notch. Global markets are now experiencing volatilities near the 2008 crisis
levels. The instability and unpredictability will likely be on the menu of this trading week as well. We recommend avoiding panic selling as
much as possible.
By Ipek Ozkardeskaya