Central Banks Fool The Markets Again, But Only For A Little While

Over the weekend, the following happened: China’s exports and imports fell by 11.2% and 18.8%, respectively, numbers which, for a trading power, are nothing short of apocalyptic. Japan’s Q4 GDP shrank at an annualized rate of 1.4% which, for a country that had spent the previous three years borrowing and printing record amounts of new currency, is an extraordinary admission of failure. And US allies Turkey and Saudi Arabia appeared to be invading Syria, putting them – and by implication the US – in direct confrontation with Russia.
This combination of disturbing trends and events would, you’d think, produce a dark and chaotic opening for Monday’s global financial markets. But you’d be wrong, because while the above was going on, Mario Draghi, head of the European Central Bank announced that he ‘will not hesitate to act’ to keep the past month’s instability from spreading. And traders responded the way they’ve been trained to, with panic buying of pretty much every dicey financial asset and panic selling of safe havens like gold, Treasury bonds and euros.
This came after previous attempts by central banks – including China’s yuan devaluation and Japan’s foray into negative interest rates – failed to get the markets’ juices flowing. So why did Draghi succeed? Three reasons:

This post was published at DollarCollapse on February 15, 2016.