Yen Crumbles, Netflix Earnings, Russian Offensive - What's Moving Markets

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By Geoffrey Smith

Investing.com -- U.S. bond yields hit 3%, pushing the dollar to a new 20-year high against the yen. Russia starts its long-awaited offensive against eastern Ukraine as sanctions bite into its oil production. Crude prices still fall due to ongoing concerns about the strength of Chinese demand. Stocks are set to open at new one-month lows, with Netflix earnings and March housing starts and building permits the big events on the calendar. Here's what you need to know in financial markets on Tuesday, 19th April.

1. Yen collapses as Bullard comments drive yields higher

The dollar resumed its upward march after St. Louis Federal Reserve President James Bullard raised the possibility of the central bank raising the Fed funds target rate by 75 basis points at its May meeting.

Bullard is at the hawkish end of the Fed’s spectrum and said that such a move wouldn’t be his “base case,” but in the last six months, he has regularly been ahead of the rest of the Fed’s top policymakers in identifying the need for tighter monetary policy.

His comments sent the 30-year Treasury bond yield up to 3% for the first time in over three years, while the widening yield differential with Japan, whose central bank still refuses to countenance any tightening of monetary policy, led to more carnage in USD/JPY, with the dollar hitting a 20-year high of 128.46 against the yen.

2. Russia starts Donbas campaign

Russia started its long-awaited offensive against the eastern Ukrainian region of Donbas, according to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

Long-range rockets also struck the capital Kyiv and the west Ukrainian city of Lviv over the weekend, as Moscow tried to stop the flow of western arms to government forces. Contrary to Russian claims last week, Ukrainian resistance is continuing in the besieged city of Mariupol, whose defenders have refused successive surrender demands.

Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, meanwhile, rejected assertions by western intelligence sources that Moscow is considering the use of tactical nuclear weapons to achieve victory, despite the conspicuous failures of its conventional forces in achieving their initial aims.

The war in Ukraine was one of the main factors behind the World Bank’s decision on Monday to slash its world growth forecast for 2022 to 3.2% from a previous estimate of 4.1%

3. Stocks set to open lower; streaming services gloomy ahead of Netflix report

U.S. stock markets are set to test new one-month lows at the open, with the latest rise in U.S. bond yields and the prospect of a world economic slowdown weighing on the outlook. The handover from Asia and Europe hasn’t helped, with Chinese stocks failing to build on Monday’s rally in response to a broad raft of economic support measures.