Deutsche Bank fine
compounds miserable week for Europe
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[September 16, 2016]
By Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - A monster fine for
Deutsche Bank compounded a miserable week for European stocks on Friday,
while bonds bounced as weak U.S. retail sales figures triggered a
pullback in Federal Reserve rate hike expectations.
News overnight that the U.S. Department of Justice had levied a far
bigger than expected $14 billion fine on Germany's largest bank sent
financial stocks across Europe tumbling amid worries others could
also be clobbered.
Bank shares were on course for a weekly loss of more than 6 percent,
their biggest since Britain's vote to leave the EU at the end of June.
Europe overall has also lagged the rest of the world, with market
falls of almost 4 percent in Italy, Spain and Portugal .
"With Deutsche Bank facing a $14bn claim against it in the U.S. for
alleged irregularities in the way it sold mortgage securities before the
financial crisis, you have to wonder if financial regulators are
starting to do more harm than good," said ETX Capital analyst Neil
Wilson.
"How can banks hope to move on from the crisis?"
Wall Street was also expected to reopen lower although it was one
of the few major markets still likely to end the week higher. MSCI's
47-country 'All World' index headed for its fourth weekly loss in
five.
The week's big anxiety that the low interest rate and mass money
printing tactics of the major central banks might be losing their
potency looked like it had been put on hold, however.
The difference between what investors demand to hold 10- or 30-year
government bonds compared to short-term 2-year debt has been climbing
sharply, but yields fell broadly on Friday after Thursday's lackluster
U.S. retail sales data.
That also kept the dollar on course for a second week of falls against
the yen as it dropped below 102 yen <JPY=>. Both the Fed and the Bank of
Japan hold policy meetings next week that will be closely watched by
markets.
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"We had an unusually calm summer considering the Brexit vote and the
U.S. political risk and I think we are now paying it back," said ABN
Amro's Chief Investment Officer Didier Duret.
"With higher yields and lower equities it has felt like there is no
place to hide... But for us this is a short-term move and there is no
reason to panic."
The gap between both U.S. two and five-year note yields and 30-year bond
yields widened to as much as 175.40 and 130.10 basis points respectively
on Thursday, the steepest since late June
Futures traders are now pricing in a 12 percent chance of a U.S. rate
increase this month, down from 15 percent on Wednesday, according to the
CME Group’s FedWatch tool. Friday's consumer price inflation data is the
next test for rates-focused traders.
CRITICAL SITUATION
Commodities markets saw wide divergences.
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After a sharp jump on Thursday, Brent crude slid 1.2 percent to $46
a barrel, extending losses for the week to 4 percent. U.S. crude
retreated 1.1 percent to $43.39, poised to end the week down roughly
5 percent.
The resumption of exports from Libya and Nigeria and worries that
U.S. rig counts would continue to rise fed the long-running theme of
global oversupply.
Gold was steady at $1,314.64 an ounce, down about 1 percent for the
week. Industrial metal nickel was looking at a 6 percent weekly drop
whereas copper was set to log its largest weekly rise in two months.
[MET/L]
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Encouraging signals out of China's housing market and indications of
a revival in its factory sector over the summer have stoked views
that demand is quietly cranking up for the third quarter.
"Copper (has) continued to bask in the afterglow of this week's
better-than-expected Chinese economic data," ANZ analysts said in a
note.
Emerging market stocks <.MSCIEF> were heading for their biggest
weekly drop since May, a fall of 2.3 percent. Russia cut its
interest rates for the second time this year.
Despite the broader easing of bond yields in Europe on Friday, there
were still signs of strains in Portugal as worries about its
finances pushed the gap between its bonds and those of Germany to
the widest since February.
Focus was also on a meeting of EU leaders in the capital of Slovakia
as they gathered without Britain following the Brexit vote.
The euro was fractionally lower at $1.1222, and Britain's pound
dropped 0.5 percent to leave it back below $1.32. [FRX/]
"The point is not to simply expect a solution to Europe's problems
from one summit - we are in a critical situation - but rather it is
about showing through actions that we can be better," German
Chancellor Angela Merkel told reporters as she arrived in
Bratislava.
(Reporting by Marc Jones; editing by John Stonestreet)
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