Week Ahead: Investors May Take Profit On Mid-East Tensions; Gold Could Soar

 | Jan 06, 2020 01:06

  • S&P 500 drops the most in 4 weeks
  • Safe havens reach monthly highs on fears of military escalation after U.S. strike takes out top Iranian general
  • Indicators suggest stock correction could sharpen
  • Global markets will likely take their cues at the start of this coming trading week from Friday's drop in risk assets after U.S. shares retreated from all-time highs on worries that an escalation in Middle East tensions would impede economic growth. Crude futures surged on the expected disruption of oil production that could result from such a scenario.

    Safe havens, including Treasurys, the Japanese yen and gold all soared.

    h2 Investors Cash Out As Geopolitcal Headwinds Mount/h2

    The S&P 500 fell 0.71% on Friday, after a U.S. drone strike in Iraq killed Iranian Major General Qassem Soleimani. It was the steepest decline in a month for the benchmark, since the 0.86% drop on Dec. 2.

    After Iran threatened “severe retaliation,” for the death of the powerful military leader, investors quickly rotated out of risk assets, driving havens to monthly highs. The tech-heavy NASDAQ and mega-cap Dow Jones slumped even more deeply, down 0.79% and 0.81% respectively.

    The unexpected military strike—after months of unchecked Iranian aggression—was like an overinflated balloon being popped by a pin-prick. And it all occurred just when market participants began believing that everything seemed to be falling into place, with President Donald Trump scheduled, at long last, to sign the Phase I portion of a trade deal with China in early January.

    Additional hopeful signals had spurred stocks to all time-highs prior to the military action: the PBoC cutting the reserve requirement in order support China's economy; global data showing signs of bottoming, after the Fed reversed policy and joined global central banks in accommodating. Nonetheless, on Friday, investors took the opportunity to cash out.