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Treasuries Surge After Trump Gives China One Month to Agree Deal

“The longer the tariffs are in place, the greater the damage it will be for China and global growth,” said IG Asia’s Jingyi Pan.

Treasuries Surge After Trump Gives China One Month to Agree Deal
Liu He, China’s vice premier, departs the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative following a meeting in Washington, D.C., U.S. (Photographer: Alex Edelman/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- U.S. Treasuries led a global rally in some of the world’s safest assets after President Donald Trump imposed a one-month deadline on China to agree a trade deal or risk tariffs on all of its exports.

Yields on benchmark 10-year bonds touched the lowest level since March, correlating with a slide in the offshore yuan, widely seen as the key barometer of risk sentiment over trade. The yen rallied, building on a four-week run of gains, while European stocks fell. Traders meanwhile boosted bets on a rate cut from the Federal Reserve this year.

“I can’t see a real deal before the G-20 summit in June,” said Ciaran O’Hagan, head of European rates strategy at Societe Generale in London. “The rally is more than justified. I am surprised that bonds are not rallying more.”

Treasuries Surge After Trump Gives China One Month to Agree Deal

The conflict between the world’s two biggest economies has taken a turn for the worse over the past week, with Trump imposing another wave of tariffs on Chinese goods Friday. That has increased fear in markets that any further escalation could seriously jeopardize the global economic recovery before many of the world’s central banks have had a chance to normalize monetary policy.

The U.S. told China it has a month to secure a trade deal or face tariffs on all its exports, ratcheting up pressure after it accused President Xi Jinping’s government of backpedaling on promises. China has said additional duties imposed should be removed for an agreement, setting the stage for weeks of uncertainty in financial markets after investors had thought a pact was near.

“Markets have grown less optimistic about the U.S.-China trade negotiations after some news reports from China’s state-run media suggested a harder stance,’’ said Mayank Mishra, macro strategist at Standard Chartered Bank in Singapore. “The risk of protracted U.S.-China trade tensions may weigh down USD/JPY in the short term.”

Yields on 10-year Treasuries fell as much as five basis points to 2.41%, the lowest level since March 29. The yen strengthened against all of its major peers, rising as much as 0.3% to 109.60 against the dollar. Offshore yuan fell as much as 0.9% to 6.91 per dollar, a 2019 low. S&P 500 futures dropped 1.3%.

Fraught Relationships

The U.S. hiked tariffs on more than $200 billion of Chinese goods on Friday, with the Asian nation vowing to retaliate. A week of tense stand-off before crucial talks in Washington led to the yen strengthening by 1 percent. It touched 109.47 against the dollar on Thursday, its highest since February.

Societe Generale estimated that should the current tariffs remain in place, growth in the U.S. economy will be crimped by 0.25% over a two-to-three year horizon, compared with 0.5% in China. The impact globally will be 0.15%, while the imposition of tariffs on all Chinese goods could double the pain, O’Hagan said.

Trump piled on the pressure on Saturday, tweeting that “far worse” terms would be on offer for China if it doesn’t act now. While China has invited a U.S. delegation back to Beijing, no dates have been set for the next round of talks, according to White House economic director Larry Kudlow.

--With assistance from Chikafumi Hodo and Masaki Kondo.

To contact the reporters on this story: Michael G. Wilson in Sydney at mwilson176@bloomberg.net;John Ainger in London at jainger@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Ven Ram at vram1@bloomberg.net;Tan Hwee Ann at hatan@bloomberg.net

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