USDJPY, Yields Slide, Gold Spikes As Markets Finally Respond To Latest Set Of Economic, Geopolitical Shocks

With markets shut on Good Friday, even as the one-two knockout punch of the worst monthly core CPI print in 7 years hit...

 

... coupled with a miss in March retail sales, which suffered their biggest two month drop in 2 years...

... on Sunday night traders were desperate to catch up, or rather down to, the USDJPY which was the only instrument that traded through Friday's data dump, and which at last check was trading at 108.34, nearly 100 pips below the Friday open, sliding further in early Japanese trading as the last holdouts on the reflation trade capitulate in panic, further pressured by fears over the rapidly deteriorating situation in North Korea.

 

As one would expect, a surge in the yen means continued weakness in the dollar, and sure enough on Sunday night, Donald Trump's recent bid for a weaker greenback has been the market's command.

 

Predictably, and contrary to virtually every sell side analyst's prediction for ongoing levitation in interest rates, US TSY yields have tumbled across the curve, with 5-year yields down as much as 5bps at 1.72%, lowest since Nov. 18, while the benchmark 10-year yield has slide 4bps to 2.20%, also the lowest since the election.

 

Perhaps the one asset class where the reflation revulsion has not been observed yet is S&P futures, as the E-mini stubbornly holds out to selling pressure and is barely lower on the session following Thursday's sharp drop.

 

However, while equity markets may be ignoring the moves in FX and rates, gold is hardly waiting, and on Sunday night evening was trading above $1,290/oz, the highest price since the Trump election... 

 

... and poised for a key double resistance breakout.

 

While the spike in gold is hardly a surprise in light of last week's economic data and this weekend's North Korean events, with spot not trading there was little opportunity for traders to take advantage of what many expected would be a sharp jump in the yellow metal. Except... that's not quite true: as we noted on Friday, while spot may have be closed, physical vendors such as Ampex were happy to sell gold, and even better, at Thursday's depressed price.

Finally, before we forget, there was another asset class that was surging overnight: the Turkish lire, which has been on fire ever since Erdogan won the popular mandate to become dictator, and which just as Barclays predicted, would lead to a spike in the Turkish currency... if only for a the very near future.

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