Markets are flashing signs that trade is back on top of risk radar
Developed-nation bonds in the region extended recent gains Wednesday.

Haven assets are rallying in Asia as US-China trade tensions take a turn for the worse, ending weeks of optimism that a deal between the two countries was close enough to touch.
Developed-nation bonds in the region extended recent gains Wednesday, with yields on 10-year Treasuries sinking almost 20 basis points in the past two weeks. Australia’s have fallen even more. The Aussie dollar, a proxy to China’s economy due to the two nations’ close trade ties, has dropped versus all its Group-of-10 peers in November, while stocks have fallen from recent highs.
“Markets have been guilty for around 20 months of underestimating the risks of a trade deal being done at all,” said Stephen Miller, an adviser in Sydney at GSFM, a unit of Canada’s CI Financial Group. “Whether it’s Treasuries or stocks or currencies, investors are now repositioning their bets in case we see political dysfunctions persist and reach a tipping point that spills over to trade.”
The haven trade in the region gathered pace after the US Senate on Tuesday unanimously passed a bill aimed at supporting Hong Kong protesters, spurring China to repeat a threat to retaliate. It would be difficult for the US to sign a deal if the demonstrations in Hong Kong are met with violence, US Vice President Mike Pence said earlier this week.

“The market reaction could be much more negative if a repeat of May happens,” said Eugene Leow, a fixed-income strategist in DBS Bank in Singapore. Tensions in Hong Kong are also adding “another element of risk at a time when China-US trade talks enter the crucial last stage,” he said.
Here are a range of market moves showing investors’ risk-off mood:
- Treasury 10-year yields dropped as much as 4 basis points Wednesday to a two-week low of 1.74%
- Australia’s 10-year yield declined 5 basis points to 1.07%
- South Korea’s won, often viewed as a proxy for global trade, slipped 0.2%, extending this month’s decline to 0.6%
- A JPMorgan gauge of demand for emerging-market currencies has fallen for a second week
- The VIX Index, a measure of expected volatility in US stocks, has risen more than 6% this week
“The market mood is definitely shifting,” said Prashant Newnaha, senior strategist at TD Securities in Singapore. “There are a lot of questions on where this deal is sitting at the moment, and developments we’ve had in May are now putting some doubts on whether a deal can be signed at all.”
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