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More than $5 trillion wiped out since 'Liberation Day'
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Bond market meltdown 'has no precedent' - strategist
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U.S. dollar wobbly, investors question safety of U.S.
assets
By Tom Westbrook and Dhara Ranasinghe
SINGAPORE/LONDON, April 11 (Reuters) - The pain, said
Shuntaro Takeuchi, was 10 out of 10.
Not in the portfolio of Japanese stocks he runs out of Palo
Alto, California, but in his appendix.
It would have to come out, just as his colleagues at
Matthews Asia were on a phone call to chart the $7 billion asset
manager's path through a deepening market rout.
"I was on a conference call two minutes before the surgery,"
said Takeuchi. "The nurse was like: 'Do you really have to
attend this?'"
In Tokyo, the Nikkei was on its way to Wednesday's 4% drop
and trillions were being wiped from global equities, the largest
dollar-value drops of any market drawdown on record.
The 10 trading days since U.S. President Donald Trump hit
automakers with tariffs have been the most convulsive since the
pandemic panic of 2020, as prices of stocks to bonds, oil, gold
and even the U.S. dollar itself have swung wildly.
Selling in U.S. Treasuries - the lynchpin safe asset in
global markets - was the heaviest for decades, as if to
underline how the foundations of trade and finance have been
shaken.
The meltdown began in the wake of what Trump called
"Liberation Day".
He raised, on April 2, the highest wall of tariffs around
the U.S. economy in a hundred years with a blanket 10% tax on
imports and even higher rates on individual trading partners.
In the week that has followed that has morphed into open
economic conflict with China, which by Friday was all but under
a U.S. trade embargo as tariffs rose to 145%.
More than $5 trillion in market value has vanished from the
MSCI all-country index of world stocks during
the roller-coaster ride since April 2. It has exposed how
investors were unprepared for the aggression of Trump's tariffs
and that his unpredictability and reversals risk harming the
United States' place at the centre of the financial universe.
"We've had a fracturing of confidence and we don't know what
the second-order effects of that are from the market falling,"
said Geoff Wilson, a veteran fund manager in Australia.
"There could be some hedge funds that have gone under, there
could be other consequences which will only become clear over
the next few weeks." His funds were buyers in the turmoil.
TOMB SWEEPING
At first the epicentre of selling was in any sort of
exposure to economic growth - banks, industrial metals and
firms such as Apple with supply chains anchored in China.
Then, just before sundown on April 4 in Beijing, on tomb
sweeping day - a national holiday to pay respects to ancestors,
China retaliated and put a 34% tariff on imports from the U.S.
Oil plunged to a four-year low and the main global stock
market index tipped past the threshold for what market-types
call a "correction" - a drawdown of 10% or more from a peak.
Even gold, seen as a haven in times of turmoil,
started tumbling, an ominous sign as investors who faced margin
calls were forced to sell their safest assets to square losses.
For Wong Kok Hoi, founder and chief executive officer of APS
Asset Management in Singapore, it was a scenario he has been
worrying about for years.
"Obviously, I did not in my wildest dreams think tariff
rates could go up as high as 125%," he said, as subsequent days
saw tit-for-tat levies ratchet higher.
"Basically, trade will stop between the two largest
economies in the world."
Handily, for him, he had positioned into China's
semiconductor, artificial intelligence and biotechnology sectors
and said his portfolio was up some 20% for the year so far.
TRADE WAR
On Wall Street, bankers dialled in to global meetings and
tried to reassure rattled clients.
There were hopes, last weekend, that Trump would relent
before the tariffs actually hit.
But returning from a weekend golfing reporters asked him
about markets on Air Force One on Sunday and he replied that
"sometimes you have to take medicine."
That opened the floodgates. Nasdaq 100 futures were
soon down more than 5% and Nikkei futures hit a circuit breaker
after diving 8%, then kept falling.
The CBOE Volatility Index, nicknamed Wall Street's
"fear gauge", spiked above 60 - a level usually seen during
meltdowns such as 2020 or the 2008 financial crisis.
The S&P 500 finished the day 17% below a record high
it had hit just seven weeks earlier. Christopher Forbes, head of
Asia at CMC Markets said Friday and Monday were the highest
volume trading days on record.
Takeuchi, in California, aside from his rush to surgery, was
trying to make sure his portfolio was as sheltered as possible.
"We did trade," he said, buying and selling when stocks in
his book or watch list hit target or buy prices, finding
companies with limited U.S. exposure, but not wanting to make
big bets on sectors or the outcome of Trump's trade war.
"I don't want to be too dramatic about it. What we are doing
is to not panic, control the risk and focus on stock selection."
BOND FIRE
For months currency markets, as the means of global trade,
were expected to be the front line for price adjustments to
tariffs.
The shock, instead, came from bonds. Shortly after the
tariffs took effect in the middle of the New York night, a
massive wave of selling hit Treasuries in Asia on Wednesday.
Yields, which usually make small moves since the market is
liquid and deep, rose wildly and unleashed the most manic phase
- so far - of markets' tariff tantrum.
The 10-year Treasury yield jumped nearly 20
basis points in two hours in what traders took as a signal of
either forced selling somewhere in the market, or even more
worryingly, that U.S. bonds were faltering as a safe haven.
But within hours, markets were whipsawed again. Trump
stunned the world by announcing a pause on the heavier bilateral
tariffs, keeping a blanket 10% tax on imports and raising levies
again on China.
Equities roared higher, notching some of the largest
percentage gains since 2008, but with so much uncertainty they
have started to wobble again.
WHIPLASH
Martin Whetton, Westpac's head of financial markets strategy
and a 30-year veteran of markets in Sydney and London, said
Wednesday's trade in fixed income had no historical precedent.
"That money did not scramble to secure U.S. dollar funding,
to buy Treasuries and the U.S dollar for safety, is startling
and a sharp warning," he said.
By Friday, the eleventh session since Trump's auto tariffs
were announced, exhaustion had set in but there was little sense
of dust settling. Beijing on Friday increased its tariffs on
U.S. imports to 125%.
Stocks fell, the dollar sank to a decade-low on the
safe-haven Swiss franc and talk turned to whether the
period marks the beginning of the end of U.S. dominance of
global finance.
"It's like we had a year of trading in a few days," said
Jack McIntyre, portfolio manager for Brandywine Global, U.S,
which runs almost $60 billion in assets.
"You focus on things that you know," he said, with a view to
further falls in the dollar as the U.S. economy slows down and,
maybe, the rest of the world keeps selling U.S. assets.