Shares, emerging market currencies steady after fresh
mauling
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[August 16, 2018]
By Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - Bruised world shares and
emerging market currencies fought to regain their footing on Thursday,
after China said it will hold trade talks with the United States later
this month and Turkey’s lira continued its recovery run.
Asian equities had hit one-year lows overnight as they tracked
Wednesday's global falls and Tencent results disappointed, but a fresh
recent high for the FTSE and modest gains elsewhere pulled Europe up
early on. <0#.INDEXE> [.EU]
A dip in the dollar <.DXY> and the sight of the lira striding back above
6 per dollar <TRYTOM=D3> and a higher Chinese yuan also steadied
emerging market currencies like South Africa's rand, Russia's rouble and
Mexico's peso.
EM stocks nudged lower again though after they had crossed the 20
percent peak-to-trough threshold that defines a 'bear' market. Metals
markets clawed higher, however, after copper had also entered 'bear'
territory.
"The Chinese are heading to Washington and yuan bounced, the Qataris are
heading to Ankara and the lira bounced and has left everything else
floating around really," said Societe Generale's global head of currency
strategy Kit Juckes.
He added that it was still too early to sound the all clear around
Turkey - its new finance minister and son-in-law of President Tayyip
Erdogan will hold a global conference call later - and that the broader
worries were still around the extent of China's economic slowdown.
China on Thursday said a delegation led by its vice commerce minister
would travel to the United States for talks in late August at the
invitation of Washington.
That helped Chinese stocks pare losses, with both Shanghai Composite
Index <.SSEC> and Hong Kong's Hang Seng index <.HSI> each down 0.8
percent. Earlier in the day, Shanghai was down as much as 1.9 percent
while Hong Kong was off 1.7 percent.
Japan's Nikkei average <.N225> closed 0.1 percent lower in choppy trade,
with the benchmark falling as much as 1.5 percent before a brief swing
into positive territory on China news.
The euro <EUR=> rose 0.3 percent and the offshore Chinese yuan <CNY=D4>
gained 0.8 percent following Sino-U.S. trade talk news. U.S. stock
futures <ESc1> rose 0.4 percent.
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People walk past an electronic board displaying various Asian
countries' stock price index and world major index outside a
brokerage in Tokyo, Japan, August 21, 2015. REUTERS/Issei Kato/File
Photo
"The news (of the China-U.S. trade talks) triggered short-covering but I think
fundamentally it is of limited significance," said Yasuo Sakuma, chief
investment officer at Libra Investments.
Sakuma said Turkey's market swings reflect the fact that it is one of the more
vulnerable parts of the global economy at this stage in the interest rate cycle,
as the Federal Reserve seeks to normalize its monetary policy.
However, he noted there were arguably larger risks for investors, such as weak
earnings from Tencent Holdings Ltd <0700.HK>.
The Chinese tech giant reported its first quarterly profit fall in nearly 13
years on weak gaming revenue - it holds a 40 percent stake in the U.S. firm that
makes cult game Fortnite.
That had knocked other Asian tech firms with South Korea's Samsung Electronics
<005930.KS>, Asia's third largest firm by market cap, down to a one-year low.
Though metals strengthened, oil prices were left flat after data showed a
surprise weekly increase in U.S. crude stockpiles, compounding worries about a
weaker global economic growth.
Brent was at just over $70 a barrel and U.S. crude oil <CLc1> last stood at
$65.12 per barrel, having fallen to two-month lows of $64.42 per barrel,
following Wednesday's 3.2 percent fall.
The tentative recovery in risk appetite also saw bond benchmark German Bund and
U.S. Treasury yields, which move inverse to the bond's price, nudge up. [GVD/EUR]
(Reporting by Marc Jones; Editing by Toby Chopra)
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