A barrage of Chinese monetary stimulus measures lifted the likes of the CSI 300 with more than 4% and jumpstarted European dealings too. The EuroStoxx50 rose as much as 1.4%, lead by consumer discretionary/luxury sector, before paring gains to around 1% currently. WS opened slightly higher. The risk-on environment leaves some traces on bond markets as well with core bonds losing marginal ground. US Treasuries underperform Bunds, with net daily changes ranging between +1.2 (2-yr) to +4.5 bps (30-yr). The US 10-yr yield (+4.2 bps) tries to recoup first minor resistance of 3.78% (December 2023 low) with the bottoming out at the long end of the curve now firmly taking shape. German rate changes vary from -1.9 bps (2-yr) to 3 bps (30-yr). The German Ifo sentiment indicator undershot analyst estimates but that shouldn’t surprise much after yesterday’s disastrous PMIs. The combined reading fell from 86.6 to 85.4, matching the post-pandemic lows of 85.3. The indicator was lower only during the GFC and pandemic year 2020. Especially the current assessment (84.4, down from 86.4, new post-pandemic low) is in distress territory. The expectations gauge fell to 86.3, from 86.8. The darkening European economic outlook reopened the debate on an October rate cut. Lagarde and many of her colleagues dismissed it shortly after the September meeting but Estonian governing council member Muller is the first since the PMIs to not “totally” rule it out. He did add it would be easier to decide in December. European money markets give it a probability just short of 60%. Sticking to central bank speech, Fed’s Bowman explained her dissenting 25 bps rate cut vote last week. She said she still sees greater risks to price stability, “especially when the labour market continues to be near estimates of full employment.” A 25 bps move “would have better reinforced the strength in economic conditions, while also confidently recognizing progress toward our goals,” Bowman said, adding that she preferred a “measured” approach going forward. It’s classic risk-on in other markets as well, including commodities. Oil prices rise 2.2% (Brent $75.5/b), buoyed by elevated tensions in the Middle East as well after another major Israeli strike on Hezbollah targets in Lebanon. Iron adds about 2%. The FX space is a similar story with safe havens including the Japanese yen suffering. USD/JPY – though off intraday highs – fills bids around 144.1. Cyclical sensitive currencies such as the Aussie (also helped by the RBA’s status quo this morning) and kiwi dollar are among the best performers, together with the NOK and SEK. The euro has a slight edge over the dollar, allowing EUR/USD to recoup a good chunk of yesterday’s damage. The pair is changing hands around 1.114. Sterling holds on to yesterday’s impressive gains against the euro. EUR/GBP hovers around Monday’s closing levels of 0.832. Cable (GBP/USD) is readying an attack of the 1.34 big figure.
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