HomeContributorsFundamental AnalysisUK Open - Trade War, Yield Curve, FTSE Failed Open

UK Open – Trade War, Yield Curve, FTSE Failed Open

Markets calm as FTSE fails to open

Recession fears are alive and well but Friday is off to a more relaxed start, perhaps a sign that investors already have one eye on their weekend activities after a surprisingly exhausting week.

This week everyone has become obsessed with the inverted yield curve and whether it means we’re headed for recession or if it’s “different this time”. Of course, it’s always different this time. Although there are good arguments why “this time” that may actually be true.

The problem we have is that if enough people are convinced, it could become self-fulfilling. The reality is that this is just a trend that has been reliable over the last 50 years or so, rather than having any solid foundation. If Trump and Xi miraculously resolve the trade war tomorrow, are we still headed for recession? I would think not and the curve would adjust to reflect that.

At this stage though, there’s probably more reason to have faith in an indicator like to 2-10 inversion than the US and China bringing an end to this unnecessary damaging exercise. Trump is happy to continue to blame the Fed for any evidence of the trade war hurting the US while both sides seem happy to see this through and accept the consequences.

Investors are more relaxed this morning than they’ve been for the rest of the week but it would be naive to expect it to continue. There’s been plenty of whipsaw action this week so to assume today will remain calm may be asking a bit much.

The FTSE failed to open on time on Friday due to a potential trading service issue. Unfortunately, I don’t think we can blame Brexit for this one but maybe I’ll be proven wrong.

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