U.S. dollar, bonds get safe-haven rush as virus spreads

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By Wayne Cole

SYDNEY (Reuters) – Asian shares were cast adrift on Friday as fears over the creeping spread of the coronavirus sent funds fleeing to the sheltered shores of U.S. assets, lofting the dollar to three-year highs.

Even Wall Street turned south late on Thursday on reports of increased infections in Beijing, and as the virus spread in South Korea and Japan.

Corporate earnings are increasingly under threat as U.S. manufacturers, like many others, scramble for alternative sources as China’s supply chains seize up.

“COVID-19 anxiety has risen to a new level amid concerns of virus outbreaks in Beijing and outside of China,” said Rodrigo Catril, a senior FX strategist at NAB.

“U.S. and EU equity markets have been sold across the board with core global yields benefiting from safe-haven flows,” he added. “Asian currencies have suffered sharp falls, including the yen as recession fears trump the usual safe-haven demand.”

Adding to the tension was the imminent release of flash manufacturing surveys for a range of countries. Japan’s index dropped to 47.6, from 48.8, marking the steepest contraction in seven years.

Gold shined as a safe harbor and rose to its highest in seven years. The yellow metal was last at $1,620.17 having added 2.3% for the week so far.

Equities lagged, with MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan () off 0.2% on Friday in nervous trade.

South Korea () slipped 0.8% as the virus spread in the country, while Japan’s Nikkei () edged up 0.1% as a plunge in the eyen promised to aid exporters.

E-Mini futures for the S&P 500 () were down 0.25%, extending the overnight retreat. The Dow () had lost 0.44% on Thursday, while the S&P 500 () lost 0.38% and the Nasdaq () 0.67%.

BUYING BONDS

Sovereign bonds benefited from the mounting risk aversion, with yields on 30-year U.S. Treasuries () falling below the psychologically important 2% level to the lowest since September 2019.

Yields on 10-year notes () were down 7 basis points for the week at 1.52%.

“The U.S. 10-year has rallied more than all the other liquid G5 bond market alternatives,” said Alan Ruskin, global head of G10 FX strategy at Deutsche Bank (DE:).

“Treasuries attract foreign bond inflows because of their higher yields, and because higher yields leave more scope for yields to decline.”

Those flows were a boon to the U.S. dollar, boosting it to multi-month peaks against a raft of competitors this week.

The most spectacular gains came on the Japanese yen as a run of dire domestic data stirred talk of recession there and ended months of stalemate in the market.

The dollar was last lording it at 112.08 yen and set for its best week since September 2017 with a rise of 2%. Another casualty of its close trade ties with China was the Australian dollar, which plumbed 11-years lows .

The euro fared little better, touching lows last seen in April 2017 to be last at $1.0787 ().

Against a basket of currencies, the dollar hit a three-year top at 99.910 () having climbed 0.8% for the week so far.

Analysts at RBC Capital Markets noted the dollar’s outperformance had brought it close to breaching a host of major chart barriers, which could supercharge its rally.

“This has allowed the DXY to approach the 100.00 threshold – with a key resistance hurdle at 100.30 now within sight,” they wrote in a note. The same went for the .

” is now poised to pierce resistance at 7.0559 after the USD hit new cycle highs against other EM currencies.”

Oil prices faded a little early on Friday, but were still up sharply on the week.

U.S. crude () dipped 32 cents to $53.56, while Brent crude () futures were yet to trade.

(Graphic: Asian stock markets : https://product.datastream.com/dscharting/gateway.aspx?guid=516bc8cb-b44e-4346-bce3-06590d8e396b&action=REFRESH).