GLOBAL MACRO: Could The Tech Sell-off Have More Legs?

Jan-30 02:31

DeepSeek’s impact on financial markets was very obvious at the start of the week, particularly in terms of tech share indices (and most obviously through Nvidia’s share price). This steep drop has highlighted concentration risks in the sector and we outline below potential watch points for further signs of stress in this space, which could impact financial markets more broadly. 

  • Prior to the fall, Nvidia’s stock success brought with it unintended consequences for the S&P 500, leading to it becoming the most concentrated it has been since the dot-com crash of 2000.
  • This concentration has also hidden the underlying issues with the members of the S&P where only just over 20% of the stocks were able to outperform the index in recent years.
  • Not only via their S&P allocations, but through direct allocations, investors globally are potentially lacking investment diversity, with a dramatic over exposure to a select few tech stocks.
  • Importantly, there are signs exist that this new found ‘tech sell-off’ may have more to run.
  • Gold usually enjoys ‘safe-haven’ status, meaning that in times of stress in markets, it usually advances. Yet gold, which is coming off one of its best years ever in 2024, fell just over 1% on Monday during the tech sell off.
  • Traders indicate that gold contract positions were being liquidated by investors exposed to the tech sector, freeing up capital in markets that were remaining liquid, causing gold to move in a direction opposite to what it normally would have.
  • Similarly in Japan, Japanese Government Bond investors began buying JGB’s, another ‘safe-haven’ asset despite the Central Bank raising rates in its most recent meeting.
  • Local Japan investors have been buying offshore stocks for the past 7 weeks (per weekly flow data) Since early Dec over Yen2 trillion of flows have left domestic markets into offshore equities making Japanese investors potentially over exposed to US tech (although this only partially reverses prior outflows seen since Oct last year).
  • Interconnectivity cannot be ignored in financial markets and whilst moves in recent days may not yet spell the beginning of a sustained move lower, the impact on ‘safe-haven’ assets as a bell weather for broader market implications, cannot be ignored.
  • Deepseek’s entrance without question has brought about uncertainty to the entire AI ecosystem at a time where most likely, investors have been ‘jumping on the Nvidia’ bandwagon, to chase even more success.
  • To understand what happens next, don’t just watch Nvidia’s share price, rather look for erratic behaviour of other asset classes as a potential indicator that Deepseek’s impact could be more than just the AI ecosystem; and in fact challenge investor appetite and asset allocation globally. 
  • The geopolitical shifts in this space will also be in focus. Just days before Deepseek’s impact on markets, U.S. President Donald signed an executive order related to AI to "make America the world capital in artificial intelligence."

Historical bullets

FOREX: US Dollar Trending Lower After US Yields Drop

Dec-31 02:06

G10 currency moves have generally been limited with holiday-impacted trading thin. The greenback has trended lower through most of the session after yields fell on Monday, the BBDXY USD index is down 0.1%. The yen has moved the most against the US dollar with USDJPY down 0.3% to 156.42, close to the intraday low. JPY strengthened on Monday as US equities sold off and that trend has continued today with US equity futures slightly lower.

  • AUDUSD is up 0.1% to 0.6229, close to the intraday high, after a low of 0.6211 earlier. It may face downward pressure with A$620mn of options due to expire on January 2 at 0.6175. There is also little support for Aussie from risk appetite. AUDJPY is down 0.2% to 97.42.
  • NZDUSD is moderately higher at 0.5642 following a drop to 0.5633. AUDNZD is up 0.1% to 1.1040.
  • EURUSD and GBPUSD are slightly higher at 1.0411 and 1.2559 respectively.
  • Japan, South Korea and Thailand are closed and the equity markets that are open are currently mixed. The Hang Seng is up 0.2% but the CSI 300 is down 0.2% and the ASX -0.6%. Copper is up 0.1% and iron ore is around $101/t.
  • Germany, Italy, Switzerland, Sweden and Norway have holidays, the UK closes at 12:30 and France at 14:05.
  • US October house price data and December Dallas Fed print later. 

CHINA DATA: Non-Manufacturing Sector Drives PMI Improvement

Dec-31 01:46

China’s PMI data showed activity expanding at a faster rate in December driven by the non-manufacturing sector with industry remaining lacklustre. The composite PMI picked up to 52.2 from 50.8 due to a 2.2 point rise to 52.2 in services, which was stronger than expected. 

  • Manufacturing disappointed though with the PMI moving closer to the breakeven-50 mark at 50.1 after 50.3 last month. Lacklustre domestic growth has prompted officials to announce that there will be more fiscal and monetary stimulus in 2025, but details remain vague.
  • The better-than-expected non-manufacturing PMI has supported USDCNH with most of its decline today sustained with the pair at 7.3057 close to its intraday low at 7.3053. The CSI 300 opened little changed and is currently down moderately. 

BONDS: NZGBS: Closed Richer On A Shortened Pre-Holiday Session

Dec-31 01:45

On an abbreviated last session of the year, NZGBs closed richer, with benchmark yields 4-8bps lower. 

  • The local calendar was empty today. CoreLogic Home Values will be released on January 2.
  • There has been no cash dealing in US tsys today with Japan out for a bank holiday. TYH5 is +0-03+ firmer at 109-02+ after Monday’s solid gains. Today’s US data (prior, est) includes FHFA House Price Index MoM (0.7%, 0.4%) and S&P CoreLogic CS 20-City MoM SA (0.18%, 0.20%) at 0900ET, Dallas Fed Services Activity (9.8, --) at 1030ET.
  • Swap rates closed 5-7bps lower, with the 2s10s curve flatter.
  • RBNZ dated OIS pricing closed little changed across meetings. 55bps of easing is priced for February, with a cumulative 123bps by November 2025.