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Dollar 20-Year High, Rivian Block Sales, Chinese Trade - What's Moving Markets

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By Geoffrey Smith

Investing.com -- The dollar hit a 20-year high as global risk aversion mounts in the wake of Friday's employment report. Ford and (apparently) Amazon are getting rid of large amounts of Rivian stock with block sales that will raise eyebrows at those who were persuaded to buy into the IPO at three times the price only a few months ago. The signal that sends about valuations means that stocks are set for another rocky day. China's export growth slows to a crawl in April as Shanghai's port was shut by COVID. Still, things could be worse. You could be Vladimir Putin, holding a Victory Parade while your armed forces still struggle no closer to subduing Ukraine after 10 weeks of fighting. Here's what you need to know in financial markets on Monday, 9th May.

1. Dollar hits 20-year high as jobs report fails to dispel rate fears

The dollar continued to surge in the wake of Friday’s employment report for April, which did nothing to alleviate concerns of higher U.S. interest rates or fears of what they will do to the world economy.

The dollar index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six developed market currencies, touched a high of 104.205 before paring its gains to trade at 103.880 by 6:30 AM ET (1030 GMT), a gain of 0.2% on the day. Gains were across the board.

The dollar also gained 0.8% against the offhore yuan, after China’s trade data for March showed annual growth in exports slowing to only 3.9% from over 14% in February, hurt by the month-long COVID-driven disruption to the country’s largest port at Shanghai. The dollar also hit a record high against the Indian rupee.

Digital currencies also suffered, with Bitcoin falling 3.3% to test its low for the year, while Ethereum fell 4.2%.

2. Early investors pile out of Rivian

Two of Rivian Automotive's (NASDAQ:RIVN) big early backers are reducing their stakes in the company via big block sales, according to various reports.

CNBC reported on Sunday that Ford (NYSE:F) will place 8 million shares of its total holding of 102 million in the electric van maker in an accelerated book-building process led by Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS). J.P. Morgan (NYSE:JPM), meanwhile, is set to sell between 12 million and 13 million Rivian shares on behalf of another big shareholder. The seller wasn’t named but is widely believed to be Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN).

The blocks are set to be sold at $26.90, a discount of around 6.5% to Friday’s close. The banks handling the sales were both joint lead managers on Rivian’s IPO last year when they sold the same stock at $78.