Times of Eswatini

Markets struggle, hike in interest rates

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J-fin24 OHANNESBUR­G – South African markets struggled yesterday and the Dollar held big gains as a blockbuste­r US jobs report ramped up bets that the Federal Reserve will announce more sharp interest rate hikes as it tried to tame runaway inflation.

The Rand fell to R16.76/US$ on yesterday morning.

While the employment reading which was more than twice as high as expected - indicated the world’s top economy remained resilient despite rising prices and borrowing costs, it will complicate the bank’s plans to tighten monetary policy. Traders had hoped that with several indicators pointing to a slowdown, including GDP figures showing a technical recession, policymake­rs could begin to ease back on their pace of rate hikes.

Now, speculatio­n is growing that the Fed will have to announce a third successive 75 basis-point increase next month, particular­ly as officials have said their decisions will be data-dependent.

“Friday’s payroll report indicates an overheated labour market that continues to tighten further,” said SPI Asset Management’s Stephen Innes.

Minimum

“Hence at minimum, the markets expect another 100 basis points of Fed funds rate increases over the next three meetings, with risks skewed towards significan­t increases.”

All eyes are now on the release this week of US July inflation data, which is expected to show a slight slowdown from June but still at four-decade highs.

The “report seems very unlikely to offer ‘compelling evidence’ of a slowdown needed for the Fed to pull away from its aggressive inflation-fighting mode.” Innes added.

The jobs figures left Wall Street’s main indexes mixed on Friday, and Asia followed suit with markets fluctuatin­g in early trade. However, there was some relief that tensions had calmed since Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan last week sparked a furious reaction from China that saw it conduct days of live-fire military drills around the island. Hong Kong dipped along with Sydney, Seoul, Singapore, Taipei, Manila, Jakarta and Wellington.

Tokyo edged up and Shanghai was flat, with better-than-expected Chinese trade data offset by fresh worries about COVID 19 lockdowns in the country that threatened the economic recovery. The prospect of higher interest rates sent the Dollar surging, and it held on to those gains in Asia.Bets on a recession across leading economies continued to weigh on oil prices as investors worry about the impact on demand -- figures last week indicated Americans were driving less now than in summer 2020 at the height of the pandemic.

Pushing

A rise in US stockpiles was partly responsibl­e for a 10 percent drop in the commodity last week, pushing WTI below US$90 for the first time since February. Both main contracts had lost all the gains seen in the wake of Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, which led the United States and Europe to ban imports of Russian crude, hammering already thin supplies.

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