Nuclear nerves wipe $1
trillion off world stocks
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[August 11, 2017]
By Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - The damage inflicted on
world stocks this week by the escalating war of words over North Korea
topped $1 trillion on Friday, as investors again took cover in the yen,
the Swiss franc, gold and government bonds.
With the tense mood pushing European shares down for a third day [EU]
and Wall Street set to fall again [.N], global stocks <.WORLD> were on
course for their worst week since Donald Trump won November's U.S.
presidential election.
Now installed in the White House, Trump issued a new warning to
Pyongyang on Thursday that his previous promise to unleash "fire and
fury" may not have been strong enough. North Korea had responded with a
threat to land a missile near the U.S. Pacific territory of Guam.
Japanese markets were closed for a holiday but the yen powered on,
hitting an eight-week high of 108.91 yen to the dollar <JPY=>, adding to
its biggest weekly gain since May.
The yen tends to benefit during times of geopolitical or financial
stress as Japan is the world's biggest creditor nation and there is an
assumption that Japanese investors there will repatriate funds should a
crisis materialize.
The Swiss franc <CHF=>, the other traditional safety-play among
currencies, has benefited too. Two weeks ago it saw its biggest weakly
fall against the euro <EURCHF=> since the start of 2015. This week has
seen its biggest rise since June 2016.
And in bond markets, 10-year U.S. Treasuries and Germany's ultra-safe
government bonds, known as Bunds, were trading at their highest prices
since June.
"We do just not know what happens next with the North Korea situation,"
said BNY Mellon FX strategist Neil Mellor.
"For quite some time the market hasn't really reacted to things on the
Korean Peninsula because we know from the past it is largely North
Korean sabre-rattling, and it may yet be. But with the rhetoric having
gone to a different level, the market just can't afford to take that
risk."
Many world stock markets have hit record or multi-year highs in recent
weeks, leaving them vulnerable to a sell-off, and the tensions over
North Korea have proved the trigger.
The CBOE Volatility Index <.VIX>, the most widely followed barometer of
expected near-term U.S. stock market volatility, hit its highest mark
since Nov. 8, when Trump was elected president.
The Chinese volatility gauge <.VXFXI> jumped by the most since January
2016, to its highest level in more than seven months. The euro zone's
version <.V2TX> is at its highest since April, when France's election
was rattling the region.
Overnight, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan
<.MIAPJ0000PUS> had skidded 1.55 percent, its biggest one-day loss since
mid-December, to leave it down 2.5 percent for the week.
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Traders work in front of the German share price index, DAX board, at
the stock exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, August 7, 2017.
REUTERS/Staff/Remote
"What has changed this time is that the scary threats and war of words between
the U.S. and North Korea have intensified to the point that markets can't ignore
it," said Shane Oliver, head of investment strategy at AMP Capital in Sydney.
"Of course, it's all come at a time when share markets are due for a correction,
so North Korea has provided a perfect trigger."
NEW CUBAN CRISIS?
South Korea's KOSPI fell 1.8 percent to an 11-1/2-week low, but its losses for
the week are a relatively modest 3.2 percent. "Pretty remarkable, perhaps even
extraordinary, considering," said Tim Ash, strategist at fund manager BlueBay.
The Korean won also continued to skid, down 0.45 percent to 1,147.2, falling
below its 200-day moving average for the first time in a month.
Australian shares were down 1.3 percent, set for a weekly loss of 0.6
percent and Chinese and Hong Kong bluechips lost 1.6 percent and 1.9 percent
respectively.
A Chinese state-run newspaper said on Friday that China should make clear that
it will stay neutral if North Korea launches an attack that threatens the United
States, but that if the U.S. attacks first and tries to overthrow North Korea's
government, China will prevent it doing so.
"This situation is beginning to develop into this generation's Cuban Missile
crisis moment," ING's chief Asia economist Robert Carnell wrote in a note.
The market's backstop safety asset, gold, edged up to its latest two-month high
of $1,288 an ounce. It soared over 2 percent in the previous two sessions, and
is set for a weekly gain of 2.25 percent.
Crude futures meanwhile extended losses on fears of slowing demand and lingering
concerns over global oversupply. [O/R]
U.S. crude was down 0.9 percent at $48.16 per barrel, on track for a weekly loss
of 2.9 percent.
Global benchmark Brent also fell 0.9 percent to $51.44, after Thursday's 1.5
percent drop. It is poised to end the week down 1.9 percent. Copper, the
bellwether industrial metal, was set for its first weekly drop in five weeks.
Away from the geopolitical drama, U.S. inflation data is due at 1330 GMT. The
Korea tensions though have seen both U.S. and European markets this week push
back expectations of when the Fed and ECB might hike interest rates.
(Additional reporting by Nichola Saminather in Singapore, Abhinav Ramnarayan in
London; Editing by Catherine Evans)
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