(Bloomberg) -- Wall Street is on the hunt for pressure points in global markets that signal just how lasting damage from the coronavirus is going to be.
With the number of confirmed infections surging, strategists and investors are turning to everything from S&P 500 options and bond spreads to monetary liquidity signals for macro insights, trading ideas and hedging strategies.
Shares in Shanghai tumbled the most since 2015 as the nation’s economy remained virtually shut down because of the deadly outbreak.
Sure, U.S. stocks are rebounding after last week’s slump but traders are far from sanguine with corners of the options market on high alert.
Here are some of the things the pros are looking at:
Sell Mode
Aberdeen Standard bond fund manager Luke Hickmore is eyeing tourism trends and big automakers that rely on Chinese manufacturers.
I reduced exposure to supply chain-at-risk businesses on Wednesday. So VW went, GM went, InterContinental Hotels went, and APT Pipelines from Australia went. The airlines have stopped flying to China and the capacity coming out of China has collapsed. The impact will be at least through to the end of February, possibly March even if we see a peak in the short-term over the next few days.
Hickmore’s main measure of stress is global bond yields which have plunged toward August levels.
Goldman Gauge
Based on previous viral outbreaks, Goldman Sachs Group Inc (NYSE:GS). strategists George Cole and Avisha Thakkar note that risk assets tend to stabilize two weeks to one month on average after initial panic selling -- while often recovering before the full impact shows up in underlying data.
By contrast rate markets tend to stay low even when the data perks up, anchored by dovish monetary policy. They wrote in a Friday note:
This suggests that equities and long-end rates could snap back on news of stabilization in infections. But the incoming data flow could induce risk-averse central banks to shift towards a more dovish stance, such as the BoE, the RBA and the BoC. For the major markets we expect that curves will re-steepen when risk sentiment eventually recovers.
Inversion Watch
Ben Emons, managing director of macro strategy at Medley Global Advisors, is looking out for actions by the Chinese central bank. Policy makers on Monday cut rates and injected cash into the financial system as part of a slew of measures to shore up markets.
The unknown economic effects of the coronavirus have led to the plunge in the copper price. This is signaling a material global growth slowdown could be ahead. As such, global yield curves could re-invert, which can deteriorate market sentiment and completely reverse euphoria about the phase one deal.
When liquidity conditions in the onshore market deteriorate, the People’s Bank of China could ramp up liquidity injections. A gauge of large injections to come is when the difference between the implied yield of the onshore yuan and offshore yuan is significantly wide.
At a point the net liquidity in the Chinese inter-bank system has contracted, there is the potential of a PBOC liquidity wave.
Volatility Twins
Tallbacken Capital Advisors’ Michael Purves is watching the correlation between one-month risk reversals on the Korean won and the Cboe Volatility Index. The pair moved more or less together for most of 2019 as trade headlines flared. They’re still moving together, but for a different reason. “This correlation persists even though the reasons are shifting from trade to coronavirus,” Purves wrote in an email.
Curve Anxiety
The spread between one- and three-month put options on the S&P 500 is one way Yannis Couletsis gauges whether market nerves about the respiratory outbreak are reaching an inflection point. When this turns positive, it’s a sign that anxiety has reached a crescendo. The trader at Credence Capital Management describes it as a “gauge of the insurance premium investors are willing to pay for the downside.”
Commodity Fear
George Pearkes, macro strategist at Bespoke Investment Group, is watching the dynamics of the oil market where the pricing curve offers clues to demand in China.
Large declines in reported demand in China have led the market to rapidly reduce the premium paid for barrels delivered near-term -- front-month futures -- relative to out-month barrels. This decline in backwardation shows how much the shift in Chinese demand has served to loosen the physical market, which tends to be best-proxied by the shape of the futures curve.