(Bloomberg) - Global risk assets were at the epicenter of a selling spree Friday as investors kicked off the second half of the year with recession concerns front and center.
Stocks and equity futures from Japan to the US were mostly in decline, extending their historic first-half rout, while every Group-of-10 currency fell against havens, the dollar and the yen. Commodities retreated while global bonds continued their late-June rally.
“Recession worries are dominating markets right now and investors are ditching risk,” said Diana Mousina, senior economist at AMP Capital. “In the short term, fears around a slowdown and hawkish central banks means more downside than not.”
Investors are dumping growth-sensitive assets as concerns mount that the Federal Reserve will hike rates to the point where the US falls into a recession and drags the world along with it. Those worries climbed a notch on Thursday after a slew of disappointing economic data as global stocks capped a dismal first half set for their worst losses since 2008.
The MSCI AC World Index has fallen 21% so far this year, weighed down by the S&P 500 Index’s worst first half in more than half a century.
Though July 1 has so far been risk-off, it doesn’t mean the rest of the year will take the same direction. There has been little to no correlation between the S&P 500’s performance in the first and second half of the year, according to S&P Dow Jones Indices.
Asia Pressure
The tension was palpable in Asia trading. Taiwan’s tech-heavy benchmark entered a bear market on Friday and the growth-linked kiwi fell to a two-year low against the greenback. India’s rupee dropped to a record low, leading the government to introduce fresh measures to halt its decline.
Futures on the S&P 500 Index slid as much as 1.1% during Asia hours, pointing to more losses for the underlying gauge that tumbled almost 21% in the six months through June. That marked its worst first half performance in more than five decades.
Futures Flag Loss for US Stocks Post Worst First Half Since 1970
“Investors have fast tracked the market downside, but they can’t speed up the resolution of the structural challenges faced in the global economy,” said Gary Dugan, chief executive at the Global CIO Office in Singapore. “We also face the unwind of excesses built due to prolonged lax monetary policy making in most parts of the world.”
Sovereign debt boasted one of the few spots spared amid the carnage as investors sought havens. The yield on the global bond benchmark -- 10-year Treasuries -- slid back below 3% and Australian equivalents slumped.
Treasury 10-Year Yield Falls Below 3% as Recession Fears Mount
“Bonds are rallying even as central bankers stay hawkish because investors are in the mindset that every rate hike gets us one step closer to a recession scenario,” said Damien McColough, head of fixed-income research at Westpac Banking Corp. in Sydney. “That can change if inflation remains persistent over time, but that’s not the central market theme at the moment.”
(Adds S&P 500 performance and context in fifth and sixth paragraphs)
By Ruth Carson and Abhishek Vishnoi