Sta Hungry Stay Foolish

Stay Hungry. Stay Foolish.

A blog by Leon Oudejans

The world economy depends on geopolitics (Axios Markets)

Axios Markets title: The world economy depends on geopolitics
By: Neil Irwin
Date: 15 March 2022

These are unsettling times. Warfare in Europe. New pandemic lockdowns in China. High inflation in the U.S. that global developments stand to make worse, Axios’ Neil Irwin writes.

  • The common thread: Aspects of how the world works that people have taken for granted for a generation have become deeply uncertain.

Why it matters: There is a sense of the world coming unglued that hangs over global markets and the economy — and a sense that it’s ultimately the course of great power geopolitics that will shape economic destiny.

The threats are to globalization itself, and specifically the assumption that even countries that have big disagreements can do business with each other on an ever-widening scale.

  • At the same time, the faster and more efficient supply chains that companies have built over the course of decades are crumbling in new ways.

Driving the news: Over the weekend China announced a one-week lockdown of Shenzhen, an industrial powerhouse region that produces goods crucial to many global supply chains, due to a spike in COVID cases.

  • The shutdown is just the latest hit, at a time when war and sanctions are already straining supplies of commodities.

State of play: In effect, a collision is underway between powerful geopolitical and economic forces of a sort that are creating rapid whipsawing effects in markets as traders and policymakers try to make sense of this rapidly changing world.

  • The Russian invasion of Ukraine has caused spiking prices for oil, wheat, and many metals on commodity markets (though those prices pulled back some yesterday), as the productive capacity of two large countries, is essentially cut off from the rest of the global economy
  • There were reports that Russia has asked China for military assistance, which, if honored, would raise the possibility of the economic schism between Russia and the West expanding to include the world’s second-largest economy most populous nation.

Put it all together, and the economic outlook is messy. Yesterday’s market shifts reflected this unsettling time, with some surprising moves.

  • Treasury bond yields soared to their highest levels since 2019 — contrary to the usual pattern in which times of crisis cause people to pour money into ultra-safe bonds, driving their yields downward. It’s a sign that investors are not counting on global uncertainty to bring about cheaper money like in the past.
  • China-linked commodities dove and Chinese stocks fell precipitously (more on that below).

The bottom line: The thing about living through momentous times in history is you don’t know how things are going to end. Markets, and all of us, are just trying to make sense of it in real time.”


Note LO:
The text above is from an email newsletter. The source below has a slightly different text. I prefer the original text considering the four geopolitical factors mentioned in the first paragraph. The fourth being the end of globalization (a.k.a. decoupling).


Source:
https://www.axios.com/the-world-economy-depends-on-geopolitics-83aa5671-f92a-4c65-aafd-6f6cf46c8289.html

Archives

VIPosts

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Pin It on Pinterest