Something’s got to give in the oil market
The full article with additional charts can be accessed here
Something’s got to give in the oil market
The full article with additional charts can be accessed here
Something’s got to give in the oil market
There has been a surprising mood change at JPM over the past 4 months: after initially changing the company's long-held view on equities, which for the first time since 2007 it is no longer holds at overweight, JPM's head equity strategist Mislav Matejka has been quite vocal on urging clients to take advantage of the current rally and sell into it. To be sure, this was surprising because whether JPM is talking its book or not, the bank stands to generate more client fees if the prevailing sentiment is one of bullish optimism rather than the opposite.
Having pushed higher yesterday, it appears 'investors' have had a sudden change of heart and are panic-buying bonds today, despite Fed's Williams warning that:
Treasury yields are down 5bps (2Y) to 9bps (10Y) with non-stop buying since Europe opened.
30Y yield's 7.5bps drop is the biggest since Feb 18th, pushing the yield back to its 20-day moving average.
Despite unleashing his bazooka, Mario Draghi - like his colleagues at The BoJ - appears to have hit the limit of his impotence as the European Commission cut its outlook for growth and inflation across the Union for 2016 and 2017. Citing the economic slowdown in China and other emerging markets, geopolitical tensions and uncertainty ahead of the U.K. referendum on EU membership, WSJ reports EU’s economists also cautioned that the strength of factors that have been supporting growth in the region, such as low oil prices and a weaker euro, could start to fade.
We just posted a comment on the situation in the EU, where financial repression is still increasing. Big concern from my perspective is that negative rates and central bank market intervention seem to be frightening investors and convincing savers to abandon the financial system. Look at the earnings reports from UBS and the other large EU banks. Banks are 80% of the EU balance sheet and virtually all are shrinking. It is hard to envision how this situation does not end in tears for the nations of Europe given the policy mix.