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Markets:
Today was all about incoming Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and the market is clearly happy to have an FX guy in the room (as anyone would be) and also an adult in the room. He’s seen as a moderating force against tariffs and other policies that could stabilize markets. It was certainly a great start for him as stock markets and bond markets cheered.
The losers on the day weren’t about the Treasury Dept but rather about the State Dept as it looks as though Israel and Lebanon will announce a ceasefire tomorrow. That’s great for world peace but not so great for gold and oil, which sold off hard on the news, likely adding to the rally in Treasuries.
Finally, the strong 2-year auction underpinned real money demand for short-dated notes paying around 4.3%, which isn’t bad but is still impressive on a day where the Russell 2000 rallied 2% to a closing record. That was helped by banks and expectations of looser regulations around holdings.
In FX, the dollar sagged in Asia and Europe but recovered some ground in the US, despite yields falling further. The euro and pound both gave back around 50 pips and USD/JPY bounced strongly from 153.50 before stalling 100 pips higher. Commodity currencies were less volatile as their gains were tempered by weakness in commodities.
This article was written by Adam Button at www.forexlive.com.
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