Trading Day: Japan spreads long bond relief

In This Article:

By Jamie McGeever

ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) - TRADING DAY

Making sense of the forces driving global markets

By Jamie McGeever, Markets Columnist

Reasons to be cheerful

A tariff reprieve from U.S. President Donald Trump, a surprise bounce in U.S. consumer confidence and a slide in government bond yields sparked a rally across most markets on Tuesday, particularly U.S. assets, with Wall Street, Treasuries and the dollar all outperforming.

In my column today I look at how much the dollar may need to fall if the Trump administration is to succeed in making a significant dent in the U.S. trade deficit. More on that below, but first, a roundup of the main market moves.

If you have more time to read, here are a few articles I recommend to help you make sense of what happened in markets today.

1. Long bond blues stress the 'bedrock': Mike Dolan 2. Japan to consider trimming super-long bond issuance,sources say 3. Japan net external assets hit record, but surrendersworld's top creditor spot 4. Investors see worsening US deficit outlook as tax billheads to Senate 5. Brussels seeks companies' US spending plans as Trumphails move toward talks

Today's Key Market Moves

* Wall Street has its best day in two weeks, with the S&P500 snapping a four-day losing run to gain 2% and the Nasdaqrising 2.5%. * Every sector on the S&P 500 rises. Consumer cyclicals leadthe way, up 3%, as investors bet on stronger growth. * Japan's 30-year bond yield slides 16 bps, its biggestfall since August 5 last year, one of its largest ever. The40-year yield's 25 bps fall is a record. * The 30-year U.S. Treasury yield slumps 9 bps, its biggestfall since April 4. * The dollar index rises 0.5%, driven by the greenback's1% rise against the yen, its best day in two weeks.

Japan spreads long bond relief

Global liquidity returned to more normal levels on Tuesday as UK and U.S. markets re-opened after the long weekend, and investors mostly scooped up whatever they could get their hands on.

There were good reasons to feel bullish: President Trump extending his deadline for imposing 50% tariffs on European Union goods to July 9, relief at the long end of the Japanese Government Bond market, and a spike in U.S. consumer confidence.

There will be more back-and-forth in Trump's tariff pronouncements in the weeks ahead, and there is a case to make that each positive turn will deliver diminishing returns for markets. The next big deadline is July 9, when Trump's pause on his reciprocal tariffs with the rest of the world also expires.