Week Ahead: Sino-U.S. Clash To Roil Stocks; Dollar To Slip As Gold Gains

 | Jul 26, 2020 19:50

  • Newest US-China diplomatic tiff escalates
  • US Yields fall to all-time weekly lows
  • Gold notches record
  • For the first time in a month, US markets finished lower for the week as an old market theme resurfaced: diplomatic fallout between the US and China. The rising tensions between the two trading partners will undoubtedly drive markets during the coming week of trade.

    On Friday, the S&P 500, Dow Jones, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 all slumped for a second day as the scenario for a new cold war between the world's two largest economies continues to escalate. The BBC New York Times says the two countries are heading “toward [a] point of no return.”

    The VIX jumped. Yields remained near record lows, and the dollar extended a selloff, while gold topped $1,900.

    h2 New Geopolitical Headwinds; Rising Cases Of COVID-19/h2

    Stocks didn’t just retreat from a weekly gain this past Friday. As well, after the S&P 500 index briefly climbed into positive territory for the year, geopolitical tensions helped pull the benchmark index back into the red.

    The lastest Sino-US spat accelerated after China ordered the US to shut its Chengdu Consulate in retaliation for the US ordering the closure of China's China’s consulate in Houston on Thursday.

    Of equal concern, confirmed COVID-19 cases continue to rise, both globally and in the US. More than 4 million cases have now been reported just in the US, with 18 states setting single day records during the week. On the economic front, initial jobless claims climbed last week for the first time since March—when equities bottomed out—pointing to a faltering recovery and raising concerns it's beginning to stall. About 30 million workers are already collecting jobless benefits.

    Now, the big question is whether there will be another shutdown on expanding coronavirus outbreaks. And if there will be, how would it impact the V-shaped recovery theory?

    Currently, Florida, Texas and other hot spots have delayed reopening their economies. If the outbreak could be contained to pockets of local outbreaks across the country, it is less likely there will be another national lockdown. However, if the outbreak spreads across the US, expect the world’s largest economy to be brought to its knees.

    So, what will the market do next? As we've said before, we don’t know. First, this isn't a real market. It’s being fueled by funny money, with global central banks currently monopolizing the funding spigot.

    We're experiencing the worst global pandemic in a century, the sharpest recession in 70 years, plus in March we witnessed the fastest plunge into a bear market in history. Yet all of this was followed by the best quarter for stocks in decades. Equally astonishing, markets are back to levels seen before the virus hit.

    Get The App
    Join the millions of people who stay on top of global financial markets with Investing.com.
    Download Now

    Of course any bit of news claiming progress on a coronavirus vaccine catapults stocks higher, even if the realities regarding global innoculation aren't exactly clear. Some experts say a vaccine wouldn’t necessarily be able to stop a mutating virus, even if one currently existed. In addition, it's not obvious that most of the world population would have access to it, given the complexity of distribution logistics.

    Still, with all that uncertainty, and the US-China threat to global commerce, if the Fed made another announcement increasing their level of stimulus, investors who've forgotten what its like to trade in a real market would obediently increase their risk positions.

    Nevertheless, the European Union agreed on a landmark stimulus package early last week, the world’s largest. The EU will provide 750 billion euro, to help member states mitigate the economic downturn caused by the pandemic, yet the STOXX Europe 600 Index closed lower for the week.