
By Jamie McGeever
ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) -U.S. stocks were mixed on Tuesday, with the global momentum that had lifted Japanese and several other indices to new highs fizzling out, as investors digested a sharp fall in gold prices and the U.S. government shutdown entering its third week.
More on that below. In my column today, I look at the Trump administration’s purchases of Argentine pesos, which appears to be the U.S. government’s first ever unilateral and direct FX market intervention to support an emerging market currency. Why Argentina, and will it work?
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. FOMO meets FOWO in edgy markets: Mike Dolan 2. EU gets a lousy ‘Draghi report’ card. But it might notmatter: Klement 3. Japan’s next finance minister could unsettle yen bears 4. China’s consumer subsidy scheme needs a rethink 5. Why is inflation so high in the UK?
Today’s Key Market Moves
* STOCKS: New highs for Australia, Japan, South Korea,Taiwan, France, euro zone. Asia ex-Japan highest since February2021. Wall Street mixed – S&P 500, Nasdaq essentially flat, Dow+0.5%. * SHARES/SECTORS: GM shares +15%, Warner Bros +11%,Netflix slumps 7% in after hours trade following Q3 earnings.U.S. industrials +0.9%, consumer discretionaries +1.3%,utilities -1%. * FX: Dollar rises for a third day, biggest gains vs ZAR,THB and KRW. Argentina’s peso falls to a new low, Japanese yenslides after new finance minister appointed. * BONDS: U.S. Treasuries rise across the curve, yieldsdown 3 bps at the longer end. * COMMODITIES/METALS: Gold falls as much as 6%, silverslumps 8%. Oil settles 0.5% higher, bouncing off Monday’s5-month low.
Today’s Talking Points
* U.S.-China tensions
Buoyant stocks suggest investors are confident U.S.-China trade tensions will ease, as both sides cool the rhetoric, step away from the brink, and strike a mutually face-saving deal that ensures trade between the world’s two largest economies keeps flowing.
That may reflect over-confidence, or complacency. The mood at the IMF/World Bank meetings in Washington last week was far less upbeat, with the recent escalation around rare earths and 100% tariffs marking a new and worrying phase. Markets are priced for significant de-escalation, and if that doesn’t materialize, volatility could pick up.
* Gold finally at a tipping point?
Gold fell 6% on Tuesday, its largest decline since August 2020 and second biggest since 2013. After such a steep ascent – its year-to-date gain last week was almost 70% – the inevitable question now is: correction, or crash?