-
Markets sold off worldwide after President Trump announced plans to fire Fed governor Lisa Cook and threatened steep tariffs on China, raising fears about Fed independence and the dollar’s role as a reserve currency. S&P futures were down this morning. However some hopes emerged as investors focused on the Fed’s institutional strength.
There was a global selloff in the markets today and every major index—U.S. futures, Asia and Europe—was down this morning. Two major factors drove the negativity: President Trump’s announcement last night that he will fire U.S. Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook, thus calling into question the economic independence of the world’s most important central bank; and Trump remarking that he may impose 200% tariffs on China if Beijing restricts the U.S.’s access to supplies of rare earth minerals that are 90% controlled by China.
The result: Investors got a look at a world where the dollar is no longer a reliable reserve currency and decided they did not like it.
S&P 500 futures were sharply down this morning but made a recovery before the opening bell in New York. That recovery appears to be based on hopes that even if Trump gets his way in replacing Cook, the Fed is an institution strong enough not to bend to Trump’s will with large, sudden cuts to the interest rate.
The selloff extended to the bond market. “Investors will naturally start to increasingly question the independence of the Fed, which would result in a steeper yield curve and a weaker dollar,” ING’s Chris Turner told clients this morning. “The U.S. 2-30 year yield curve broke to a new cyclical high overnight at 122bp and is back to levels seen before the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022. The question will be whether this pressure on the Fed triggers an outright sell-off in the long-end of the bond market. On that subject, this week sees the U.S. Treasury auction $144bn of two, five and seven-year Treasury notes, where presumably Thursday’s seven-year issue will be the most challenging.”
The chaos began yesterday when the S&P 500 closed down 0.43%. “Overnight in Asia, equity markets are reflecting Monday’s losses from Wall Street as well as President Trump’s intensified rhetoric on tariffs yesterday evening. Trump’s comments included a threat of ‘200% tariffs or something’ on China if it does not export rare-earth magnets. He also warned of fresh tariffs and export restrictions on countries that do not remove digital taxes and associated regulations that hit American technology companies. Both the Nikkei (-0.88%) and the KOSPI (-0.94%) are seeing notable declines,” Jim Reid and his team at Deutsche Bank said in a note this morning.