Global markets look weaker as the surge in Covid-19 moving traders to risk-off mode, reports Fiona Cincotta 

Risk-off sentiment continues to grip global equities for a second day amid surging Coronavirus cases, global trade tensions and a stark downgrade from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to economic projections. The safe-haven trade is in full swing with riskier assets, such as equities and commodity currencies being sold off, while safe havens such as the U.S. Dollar and gold are pushing higher.

Gold has been a clear winner from this pandemic, pushing higher over the past three months, with $1,800 s realistic near-term target.

The rise in cases in some areas of the United States is particularly unnerving with Florida, Oklahoma, and South Carolina reporting a record number of cases. Seven other states also had record-high numbers earlier in the week and Texas is considering localized lockdowns in an attempt to control its massive outbreak. The overriding fear for traders is that the surge in cases could derail the economic recovery.

IMF downgrade

These fears were heightened following the IMF’s warning that the decline in global growth will be worse than initially feared. The IMF now predicts an almost 5% decline in global growth this year, substantially worse than the 3% decline forecast just 10 weeks ago. The IMF highlighted the unprecedented hit to consumer spending and more economic scarring, with firms going out of business and people remaining unemployed for longer. The outlook made for grim reading and the reality check has hit confidence in the markets. 

The S&P 500 closed 2.5% lower, negativity spilled over into Asia, with stocks slumping and European bourses look to extend the heavy sell-off from the previous session.

Trade woes - timing is everything

In addition to Coronavirus concerns and as if the markets didn’t have enough on their plate, concerning signals on the trade front is unnerving investors. President Trump has threatened tariffs on EU foods to the tune of $3.1 billion over the long-running dispute on aircraft subsidies.

German consumer confidence 

Looking ahead there are several data points to focus on. German consumer confidence is expected to show an improvement from -18.9 in June to -12 in July. This comes following yesterday’s German IFO business sentiment data which revealed that the biggest increase in business sentiment or record, as businesses see light at the end of the Coronavirus tunnel. The DAX still closed more than 3% lower, underperforming its European peers (see chart below).  The Euro also settled in the red and continues on the back foot today.

chart

The ECB will release minutes from the latest monetary policy meeting, which could offer support to both the Euro and broader sentiment.

US Triple data release

U.S. Jobless Claims will be monitored closely. Initial jobless claims are expected to increase by 1.3 million, after 1.5 million claims last week. More than three months into the Covid-19 crisis and millions of Americans are still unemployed. This will mark the 11th straight week of deceleration, while 45 million Americans have filed for unemployment benefits over the past 13 weeks. Continuing claims are also only showing a very slow pace of re-hiring, declining to 19.6 million, from 20.5 million.

Whichever way you look at this the numbers are not great. Even if jobless claims produced an encouraging number, any optimism could be wiped out by rising Coronavirus numbers.

The final GDP is expected to confirm a 5% annualized contraction in the first quarter. Meanwhile, U.S. Durable goods orders are expected to rebound, following retail sales higher. 

Fiona Cincotta is a MarketAnalyst for Currency Live