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Analysis

Japanese stocks collapse after Yen reversal – US recession fears drive risk-off slump for equities

  • European markets follow global sell-off.

  • Japanese stocks collapse after yen reversal.

  • US recession fears drive risk-off slump for equities.

Global markets have shuddered into a new week, with a historic 12% collapse in the Nikkei 225 paving the way for a widespread sell-off in risk assets. Coming off the back of Friday’s concerning US jobs report, traders are left weighing up whether to worry about a potential impending recession or simply buy-the-dip in anticipation of a sharp and swift pivot from the Federal Reserve. European markets have followed the risk-off theme seen across the globe in early trade, with the financials and commodity-focused stocks heading up the FTSE declines given the emerging growth concerns. With the Sentix investor confidence gauge collapsing to a seven-month low, we are clearly in a highly sensitive time for markets despite the monetary pivot that had long been heralded as the answer to all our problems.

The overnight slump in Japanese stocks has been grounded in a dramatic reversal for the Yen, with USDJPY taking just five-days to reverse the 15% gain seen over the course of 2024. With Japanese firms having benefitted greatly from the devaluation of the yen, the surge in the currency has hit exporting firms by making their products less price competitive, and devaluing any of their foreign earnings. The big question from here is just how far the BoJ need the yen to appreciate, with any further monetary tightening only taking place in a bid to strengthen the yen and lessen the inflationary pressures being imported from abroad. The sharp and uncontrolled nature of these Nikkei declines heighten the chance of a shift in tone from the BoJ, with any decision to call off further hikes likely to be welcomed by markets.

Friday’s US jobs report saw payrolls fall to 114k, marking the weakest pace of private-sector hiring in 16 months. However, it was the surge in unemployment that had many within the markets calling for an impending recession, sending bulls towards the exit doors. The optimists will look at this as a potential buying opportunity given the sharp repricing for upcoming easing from the Fed, with some calling for an emergency cut this week should the selling pressure persist. For today, the big-ticket item comes in the form of the ISM services PMI gauge, with much of this current selling pressure having originated from Thursday’s manufacturing decline. That ISM manufacturing report brought a concerning combination of higher prices and sharp declines for both the employment and output metrics. With the US economy predominantly driven by the services sector, another slump in today’s PMI survey could yet double down on the recession concerns that continue to drive risk-off sentiment through global markets. 

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