This is not an emerging market-friendly mix. If the dollar and U.S. yields continue to rise, one of this year's consensus trades and the allocation of hundreds of billions of dollars to emerging markets will have to be revised.
The geopolitical backdrop is not improving either.
Days from the one-year anniversary of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Vladimir Putin announced Moscow will suspend a nuclear arms treaty, and the United States and its allies prepared to impose new sanctions on Moscow. China appeared to signal support for Russia and the Wall Street Journal reported that Chinese leader Xi Jinping is preparing to visit Moscow for a summit with Russia's president Vladimir Putin in the coming months.
Back to the economics and policy, and the Reserve Bank of New Zealand is expected to slow the pace of its tightening campaign on Wednesday, and deliver a 50 bps hike to 4.75%.
That's the view of 20 out of 25 economists polled by Reuters, and the other five are going for a second successive 75 bps move. If the Fed is as hawkish as markets think it will be it is difficult to see other central banks - developed and emerging market alike - keeping pace. This would cast major doubt over another of this year's consensus ideas - a weaker dollar. Here are three key developments that could provide more direction to markets on Wednesday: - New Zealand central bank rate decision - Australia hourly wages (Q4) - Hong Kong GDP (Q4 final) <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Reuters poll on New Zealand rates ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> (By Jamie McGeever; Editing by Deepa Babington)
Messaging: jamie.mcgeever.reuters.com@reuters.net))