• Possibility of weekend escalation in Midde East propel gold and oil higher
  • Powell remarks provide only modest respite to bond selloff, dollar holds steady
  • Stocks continue to struggle as uncertainties rise, Powell keeps rate hike option

Simmering tensions keep markets on edge

The ongoing conflict in the Middle East continued to weigh on market sentiment on Friday as investors were on alert for a possible escalation over the weekend. With reports suggesting that a ground offensive by Israel into the Gaza Strip could be imminent, oil futures headed higher, extending their weekly gains to between 2% and 3%.

Gold, which has been the safe haven of choice during this latest episode, climbed to a three-month high above $1,980/oz, as the risk of the conflict widening appears to be growing. Tensions on Israel’s northern border with Lebanon are boiling over after Hezbollah reportedly fired more rockets, while a US warship intercepted three missiles from Yemen, likely to have been launched by Iranian-backed Houthi forces.

Traders are all too wary that a full-scale ground invasion could drag the entire region into a war, so these latest gains in oil and gold prices would likely be just the start if we end up with the worst-case scenario.

Stocks weighed by mixed earnings and geopolitics

The heightened geopolitical risks are starting to become a major worry for equity markets. Investors already have to navigate through an uncertain outlook for interest rates and a further complication from a fresh surge in oil prices is the last thing that markets need.

The Q3 earnings season isn’t turning out to be what many investors were hoping for either. This week’s earnings have been a mixed bag, with Tesla’s big miss sounding the alarm for the other big tech earnings due next week.

The S&P 500 and Nasdaq closed at their lowest in two week on Thursday as the rally in Netflix stock (16.1%) could only go so far in boosting the broader indices.

Powell signals conditional pause

But the biggest drag on Wall Street at the moment is the Fed’s ‘higher for longer’ stance, which pushed the 10-year Treasury yield just shy of 5% yesterday. Ten-year yields at 5% is what is considered by many as the threshold that could cause something to break in the economy, and combined with the geopolitical tensions, it’s hard to see Wall Street bulls surviving in such an environment.

Those investors betting that the Fed would come to the markets’ rescue have been left disappointed and Chair Powell’s remark’s yesterday reinforced the view that policymakers are not about to start wavering.

In comments at the Economic Club of New York, Powell appeared to agree with his colleagues that higher yields could “at the margin” reduce the need for further tightening. However, Powell also signalled that if economic growth remains above trend or the labour market stops cooling down, than further tightening might be warranted.

Rate hike expectations dipped slightly and rate cut bets increased somewhat after his remarks, pulling the two-year yield lower. But long-term yields ended the day higher, although both the 10- and 30-year yields are softer today, with the former easing to 4.94%.

Dollar lacks direction, pound and yen slip

The fact is that Powell’s comments could be interpreted as both dovish and hawkish and that might explain why there wasn’t any major reaction in the US dollar.  Weekly jobless claims out of the US yesterday were exceptionally strong, underscoring Powell’s caution on inflation.

In contrast, UK retail sales released earlier today were far weaker-than-expected, briefly pushing the pound below $1.21. Further weighing on sterling were a warning from Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey that he expects UK inflation to fall sharply next month.

The yen also came under pressure, weakening towards the 150 per dollar mark after data showed that Japan’s core CPI rate fell below 3.0% in September for the first time in two years.

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