The US dollar is paring yesterday’s gains, and the 10-year Treasury yield has slipped back below the 2.70% level after pushing 2.73% briefly. European bonds have also eased, with yields one-two basis points lower. It is thus far a mild Turn Around Tuesday but suggests that the market psychology that has driven the dollar lower and yields higher persistently since mid-December have not been broken.  

One implication is that since these markets do not act in a vacuum is that equities will likely also recover, though it is not evident yet. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index pulled back by a little more than 1% for the largest loss since early December. No regional market was unscathed, though the regional leader has been Korea’s KOSDAQ and it was down marginally (almost 0.7%), leaving it up 15.3% so far this month. The Hong Kong Enterprise Index that tracks China’s H-shares fell nearly 2% to bring this month’s gain to a still-amazing 14.4%.  

In Europe, the Dow Jones Stoxx 600 gapped lower. It is trying to fill that gap in the early turnover, but all the main bourses are still lower on the day, and the S&P 500 is trading about 0.25% lower.  

The news stream is picking up. Japan reported employment and consumption, while the focus in Europe is on Q4 GDP, but also Germany’s preliminary inflation reports ahead of tomorrow’s advance estimate for EMU. In the US, the focus is on President Trump’s first State of the Union speech.  

Japanese unemployment unexpectedly ticked up to 2.8% from 2.7%, but it appears to have been driven by people leaving jobs, which is also in this context, a sign of the tightness of the labor market. Jobs-to-applicants rose to a new high of 1.59 from 1.56. On the other hand, overall household spending was poor. In December, it stood at -0.1% year-over-year. The median in the Bloomberg survey was for a 1.3% rise after 1.8% in November.  Retail sales held up better, rising 0.9% rather than fall by 0.4% as the median had forecast. 

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