by ZeroHedge News Staff at ZeroHedge
After Monday’s historic selloff that capped a three-week, $6.4 trillion rout in global equities as a brutal unwind in the carry trade driven by last week’s BOJ rate hike hammered most consensus trades, a dead cat bounce arrived as some investors looked for bargains and markets saw a hint of calm return on Tuesday, but the rebound has been decidedly more tepid than the rout, and doesn’t prove the meltdown is over. Futures on the S&P 500 and Nasdaq are poised to regain only a fraction of yesterday’s loss, while stocks in the UK and Europe gave up earlier gains to head lower. There were stronger moves in Japan, where the two key share gauges both jumped more than 9% at the close after tumbling 12% the day before. US futures higher in a volatile, shaky session, with small caps lagging the Nasdaq, as USD finds support and Japanese Equities rally 10% overnight, erasing much of Monday’s loss. As of 7:45am, S&P futures were up 0.8%, off session highs, while Nasdaq futures rebounded 1.1% falling more than 7% over past three sessions. That said, much of the overnight gains were pared after JPM’s co-head of FX Strategy Arindam Sandilya said that we may only be 50% – 60% through this carry trade unwind. Bond yields are 5-6bps higher as treasuries retreated, with the 10-year yield heading for the first increase in almost two weeks as traders curbed bets that the Federal Reserve will step in to support markets with early interest rate cuts. Commodities are weaker, with WTI and gold modestly in the green. For the remainder of the week, the macro catalysts are bond auctions and Fedspeak.
Overnight, the bulk of the action was once again in Japan, where the Nikkei 225 index surged 3,217.46 points on Tuesday – its largest single-day rise following the largest one-day drop in history – after US service sector data for July eased concerns of a recession. The average ended the day at 34,675.46, up 3,217.46 points, or 10.2%. The index’s previous biggest single-day jump dates back to October 1990, when it gained 2,676.55 points. By percent, it was the biggest increase since 2008 and the fourth-largest rise ever…
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