logo
Oil, war and tariffs tear up markets' central bank roadmap

Oil, war and tariffs tear up markets' central bank roadmap

Reuters8 hours ago

LONDON, June 19 (Reuters) - Investor unease about an increasingly uncertain environment is rising, as Norway's shock rate cut on Thursday highlights how U.S. tariffs, Middle East conflict and a shaky dollar make global monetary policy and inflation even harder to predict.
Norway's crown slid roughly 1% against the dollar and the euro , in a sign of how unexpected the move was. And Switzerland, which cut borrowing costs to 0% on Thursday, confounded some expectations among traders for a return to negative rates in the deflation-hit nation, as its central bank warned of a cloudy global outlook.
Just a day earlier the U.S. Federal Reserve kept rates on hold and chair Jerome Powell said "no one" had conviction on the rate path ahead.
The conclusion for markets: monetary policy uncertainty is one more headwind to navigate against a backdrop of geopolitical and trade risks.
Global stocks pulled away from recent peaks, a gauge of expected volatility in European equities (.V2TX), opens new tab touched a two-month high as stocks across the region fell and government bonds, usually geopolitical risk havens, sold off.
"We're at a moment of considerable policy and macro uncertainty," said BlueBay chief investment officer at RBC Global Asset Management Mark Dowding.
"We can't see a clear trend on interest rates," he added, which meant he was holding back from active market bets across the group's investment portfolios.
Volatility was set to rise, some investors said, because a choppy dollar and oil prices whipped around by geopolitics meant that central banks were far less able to provide markets and investors a clear route map for the future.
"You cannot just take your cues from the central banks anymore as they are facing a harder job of reading the economy themselves," T.S. Lombard director of European and global macro Davide Oneglia said.
Rate-cutting European central banks are not just diverging from the Fed, which is grappling with the inflationary risks of President Donald Trump's tariffs.
They are also struggling to navigate a new era where the dollar , the lynchpin of world trade, commodity prices and asset valuations, has turned weaker and more volatile under trade war stress and government debt anxiety.
"That's a massive, massive fundamental shift in global markets that everyone is trying to assess," Monex Europe head of Macro Research Nick Rees said.
"All of those standard economic rules of thumb we use for forecasting are completely broken right now."
The dollar is down almost 9% against other major currencies this year but has risen following the outbreak of a war between Israel and Iran.
European Central Bank policymaker Francois Villeroy de Galhau said on Thursday the ECB might have to adapt its rate cut plans if oil price volatility was long-lasting.
The new status quo in markets could well be an era of central bank surprises that create rapid shifts in the market narrative, asset pricing and volatility trends, analysts said.
"We're getting into this next cycle in which variables are much more volatile, because, rather than (monetary policy) being just easily predictable, events just take over and policy and human factors, as we now know with Donald Trump, play an important role," Oneglia said.
Norway's surprise cut came because the crown was a "runaway top currency" of the trade-war era, added Societe Generale's head of FX strategy Kit Juckes.
With investors chasing around the world to identify stores of wealth that are not U.S. dollars, meanwhile, the Swiss franc has soared, cutting the costs of imports and pushing the economy into deflation.
On Thursday, the franc rose against the dollar as traders saw the SNB's cut as too small to keep deflation at bay.
Ninety One multi-asset head John Stopford said the hazard risk was rising for global stocks and that options products that aim to offer protection from incoming volatility looked fairly cheap.
He was buying bonds issued in nations where inflation and rates could come down materially, such as New Zealand, but was negative on longer-dated U.S. Treasuries and German Bunds where economic uncertainty was higher and government borrowing was likely to rise.
Global stocks (.MIWD00000PUS), opens new tab remain almost 20% above their April trough, after investors relaxed about tariffs.
Stopford said there was more to worry about in the short term.
"The stock market feels like it's a thatched house in a hot country with a fire hazard risk, and people aren't charging much to insure the house," Stopford added.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Biggest deals for global sports teams
Biggest deals for global sports teams

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Biggest deals for global sports teams

June 19 (Reuters) - The Buss family agreed in principle on Friday to sell the Los Angeles Lakers, who have won 17 National Basketball Association championships, to financier Mark Walter in a world record deal that values the franchise at $10 billion. Walter is chief executive officer of Guggenheim Partners, a global financial services firm with more than $325 billion in assets. He led the group that bought the Los Angeles Dodgers in 2012, according to The Athletic, and currently holds the controlling share in the baseball franchise. Here are the biggest purchases of global sports teams in history:

End of an era: Buss family's lasting legacy with LA Lakers
End of an era: Buss family's lasting legacy with LA Lakers

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

End of an era: Buss family's lasting legacy with LA Lakers

June 19 (Reuters) - After nearly half a century shaping one of the NBA's most well-known franchises, the Buss family is stepping down as majority owners of the Los Angeles Lakers, marking the end of an era that fused sporting dominance with Hollywood spectacle. When Jerry Buss, a former chemist turned real estate mogul, acquired the Lakers in 1979 for $67.5 million, he not only bought a basketball team, but capitalised on an opportunity to transform the league into the ultimate show. To make the Lakers a must-see attraction, Buss first elevated the product on the court. He drafted Earvin "Magic" Johnson, made Kareem Abdul-Jabbar the league's highest-paid player, and hired Pat Riley as head coach — laying the foundation for five titles between 1980 and 1988. But Buss's true innovation was off the court. He transformed the Forum into a cultural hot spot, packing courtside seats with celebrities and making the Forum Club the place to see and be seen. Timeouts featured live music and the "Laker Girls," while Prime Ticket — a cable network he co-founded — brought the show into homes across Los Angeles. The "Showtime" era faded after a quiet stretch in the 1990s, but the Lakers roared back in the 2000s, winning three straight titles with Shaquille O'Neal and Kobe Bryant, then adding two more alongside Pau Gasol in 2009 and 2010. When Buss died in 2013, he left behind a team that won 10 NBA titles under his stewardship, and perhaps more importantly, a blueprint that helped turn the NBA into a global entertainment powerhouse and the Lakers into a world-renowned brand. Jerry's daughter Jeanie succeeded him as Lakers' governor, becoming the first woman to serve as controlling owner of an NBA championship team. A steady presence in a high-pressure role, she navigated internal power struggles — most notably removing her brother Jim from basketball operations in 2017 — to reassert the franchise's direction. Her leadership focused on bringing stability and renewed ambition at a time when the team was struggling on and off the court. Her commitment paid off in 2020. With the arrival of the NBA's all-time leading scorer, LeBron James, the Lakers won their 17th title inside the league's pandemic bubble, Jeanie's first as principal owner. Jeanie Buss made another bold move to reignite the franchise in February with a blockbuster trade to acquire perennial MVP contender Luka Doncic from the Dallas Mavericks. She closed out a historic chapter for the franchise by agreeing to sell a majority stake in the team to Mark Walter in a deal that valued the Lakers at $10 billion — the largest ever for a professional sports team. Despite the change in ownership, Jeanie Buss will stay on in her role as team governor for the immediate future.

NBA-Breaking down the Buss family's sale of LA Lakers at $10-billion valuation
NBA-Breaking down the Buss family's sale of LA Lakers at $10-billion valuation

Reuters

time2 hours ago

  • Reuters

NBA-Breaking down the Buss family's sale of LA Lakers at $10-billion valuation

June 19 (Reuters) - The Buss family, architects of 11 NBA championships, is poised to relinquish their four-decade reign over the LA Lakers, with ESPN reporting they are entering an agreement to sell a majority stake in basketball's most glamorous franchise. The following is the breakdown of the deal: Lakers minority owner Mark Walter is set to take majority ownership in a deal valuing the Lakers at about $10 billion, making it the most expensive U.S. sports team valuation in history. The deal will end family control of the Lakers. The Buss family will retain a minority share of just over 15% for a period of time after the deal, ESPN reported, bringing to a close its stewardship of a franchise that became synonymous with Hollywood allure and championship excellence. Reuters could not immediately ascertain what Walter's new stake in the team would be. He purchased a minority stake in the Lakers with Todd Boehly in 2021. The previous record for biggest sports deal was held by the Boston Celtics, who agreed in March to be sold for $6.1 billion. The Lakers are one of the most storied franchises in National Basketball Association history. The team was valued at $7.1 billion by Forbes last year, behind only the Golden State Warriors and New York Knicks in the NBA. They are the second-most successful NBA team with 17 championships. The Celtics have 18. Jerry Buss, who bought the Lakers for $67.5 million in 1979, transformed them into one of the most well-known franchises in professional sports. The team won five championships during the celebrated "Showtime" era of the 1980s. The Lakers have LeBron James, arguably the league's biggest star, on their roster. They also snapped up Slovenian Luka Doncic in a high-profile trade with the Dallas Mavericks in February. Walter is a 65-year-old American billionaire businessman who is CEO and chairman of holding company TWG Global. He is also CEO of investment firm Guggenheim Partners. Walter, whose net worth is listed as $6.1 billion by Forbes, has owned the LA Dodgers baseball team since 2012. He is adding the Lakers to a sporting portfolio that includes stakes in the Cadillac Formula One team, the WNBA's Los Angeles Sparks and English Premier League soccer club Chelsea. Jerry Buss's 66% stake in the Lakers was passed on to his six children via a family trust after his death in 2013. Buss died at the age of 80 due to kidney failure. His daughter, Jeanie, took over as principal owner after his death and is set to continue as team governor, maintaining a family connection to the purple-and-gold empire her father built. The Celtics set the previous benchmark in NBA sale valuations after agreeing to a $6.1-billion sale to a group headed by private equity firm Symphony Technology Group co-founder William Chisholm in March. The NFL's Washington Commanders sold for $6.05 billion in July 2023, in a deal that, at the time, was the biggest for a North American sports franchise. Also in 2023, British billionaire Jim Ratcliffe finalised a deal to acquire a minority stake in Manchester United that valued the English soccer club at $6.3 billion. In 2022, former owner Roman Abramovich sold English soccer club Chelsea to a consortium led by Boehly that included Walter, for about $3.2 billion. Final approval of the sale could take several months. The Celtics' sale has yet to receive final approval from the NBA Board of Governors. The Board is scheduled to meet in July in Las Vegas, though that session is expected to focus primarily on potential league expansion plans.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store