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Market report: investors continue to wrestle with inflation worries as oil rises and Bitcoin takes a breather
Market Outlook

Market report: investors continue to wrestle with inflation worries as oil rises and Bitcoin takes a breather

As the era of cheap money has hurtled to an end, lowering liquidity in the markets, trading in the sessions ahead is set to stay volatile.
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13 MAY, 2022

By Susannah Streeter

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Investors are continuing to wrestling with worries over inflation as the oil price climbs back up again and supply concerns resurface amid ongoing geo-political tensions. As the era of cheap money has hurtled to an end, lowering liquidity in the markets, trading in the sessions ahead is set to stay volatile.

On Wall Street the S&P 500 was just a whisker away from a bear market before rebounding and the growls are continuing at the spectre of stagflation hovering over economies. The FTSE 100 is set to open higher with some measure of calm restored after the head of the US Federal Reserve Jerome Powell said that although taming inflation won’t be easy, the central bank saw paths ahead to make that happen.

Brent crude has edged up and is trading just below $109 dollars a barrel as the prospects loom of a European ban on Russian crude while work on a compromise to cater for Hungary’s demand for an exemption continues. Tensions have been pushed up after Russia slapped sanctions on European subsidiaries of state owned Gazprom. For now though a lid is being kept on the oil price by China’s zero-Covid policy and its city wide whack-a-mole approach of using mass lockdowns to quash infection spikes. With little end in sight to these tough restrictions, which have already caused a severe headache for manufacturers in terms of lost production, jitters are continuing about weaker growth and lower demand in the world’s second largest economy. Chinese stocks have been lifted over speculation that The People’s Bank of China will unleash a fresh round of stimulus to help companies keep borrowing costs lower amid worries about the economy losing steam.

For now the crypto wild west is taking a breather after reeling from the crash brought on by the collapse of a so called ‘stablecoin’, which demonstrated that it was anything but what it said on the tin. TerraUSD was designed to trade one on one against the dollar-but instead of being backed by the fiat currency – the reserve was made up of a mish-mash of other volatile coins. The clamour for regulation of stablecoins has become louder after losses mounted up but Bitcoin and Ether have regained some ground, with Bitcoin edging back up above $30,000. Some traders may see the sharp fall this month as an opportunity to buy the dip at a time but, given the hugely volatile nature of the coins, the crypto house of cards could tumble further. This latest plunge in the wheel of fortune demonstrates that speculating in cryptocurrencies is extremely high risk and are not suitable for investors who don’t have money they can afford to lose.

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