Market selloff due to weaker economic data and diverging central bank expectations
What happened?
A negative market reaction was triggered by a sharp selloff in Japanese stocks into the close earlier this morning, with the Topix and Nikkei indices suffering 12% declines – their worst day since 1987. The selloff cascaded through global markets with the EuroStoxx 600 trading down over 3% on Monday and S&P 500 was down approximately 3%. The selloff was catalyzed by a combination of weaker economic data in the U.S. (payrolls and manufacturing surveys) and diverging central bank expectations, which drove a sharp appreciation of the Japanese Yen.
Reaction
The bottom line
In summary, while the BOJ rate increase was a surprise to investors and the weak U.S. job numbers increased concerns around growth and interest rate cuts in the U.S., stretched positioning and crowded carry trades appear to be driving much of the moves in the Japanese yen and global markets right now.
We think the market could be overreacting to both the data flow from the U.S. and Japan. As such, we will be watching our sentiment indicators closely for potential opportunities and dislocations coming out of this. For now, we plan no major changes to positioning in portfolios, as we were already neutral-to-slightly-defensive. We are closely monitoring markets and will keep our clients posted of any updates.
Any opinion expressed is that of Russell Investments, is not a statement of fact, is subject to change and does not constitute investment advice.