World stocks sideswiped by Wall Street, U.S. yield curve
double whammy
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[December 05, 2018]
By Sujata Rao
LONDON (Reuters) - Global stocks tumbled to
one-week lows on Wednesday, as declines by long-dated U.S. bond yields
and a renewal of trade concerns stoked fears of a downturn in the United
States, the world's largest economy.
U.S. markets are closed to mark former President George H.W. Bush's
death, but the effect of Wall Street's turmoil in the previous session,
when New York-listed shares tumbled more than 3 percent, was felt in
Asia and Europe.
That pushed MSCI's all-country index down 0.4 percent. <.MIWD00000PUS>
Tuesday's declines came just a day after an equity surge driven by
optimism that China and the United States would sort out their trade
dispute. Then President Donald Trump threatened "major tariffs" on
Chinese imports if his administration failed to reach an effective trade
deal with Beijing.
"As I look into next year, most expectations for further gains have been
pared back. Investors have gone from extended bullishness at the start
of the year on equities to an uncomfortable neutrality," said Paul
O'Connor, head of multi-asset at Janus Henderson.
Trump's comments, alongside the drop in U.S. stocks and bond yields,
pushed Asian shares outside Japan <.MIAPJ0000PUS> 1.5 percent lower.
Shanghai markets <.SSEC> fell 0.6 percent, their losses limited by
Chinese officials expressing confidence that a trade deal would be
clinched on time.
But European losses were trimmed as the session continued, with a
pan-European index <.STOXX> down 0.75 percent by 1145 GMT compared with
falls of over one percent earlier.
Global equities have been shaken by fears of a recession, fanned by the
flattening U.S. Treasury yield curve -- a phenomenon in which
longer-dated debt yields fall faster than their shorter-dated
counterparts.
Such an inversion of two-year and 10-year yields, when 10-year bonds
yield less than their two-year debt, has preceded every U.S. recession
in the past 50 years.
"The market decline in the U.S. overnight and the flattening of the
yield curve reflect that economic growth momentum is taking over as the
primary concern for investors," Tai Hui, a strategist at J.P. Morgan
Asset Management told clients.
So far, 10-year yields are clinging to an 11-basis-point margin over the
two-year, although it was the smallest one in over a decade
<US2US10=RR>.
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A man walks past an electronic board showing U.S. stock market
indicators outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan, December 5, 2018.
REUTERS/Issei Kato
Graphic: US Treasury yield curve - https://tmsnrt.rs/2RAJIgP
The flattening of the curve gained momentum after last week's signal by
the Federal Reserve that it may be nearing an end to its three-year
rate-increase cycle. It has spread to the euro zone, where the German
2-10 yield curve hit its flattest since mid-2017 at 85.70 basis points.
German 10-year yields slipped to six-month lows of 0.247 percent
<DE10YT=RR> before rising back to 0.259 percent.
Italian bonds extended their rally, with two-year yields falling 10 bps
to 4 1/2-month lows <IT2YT=RR> after a cabinet official raised hopes
that the government could cut nearly four billion euros from its 2019
budget plans.
Markets are also bracing for more news on the Brexit front. British
Prime Minister Theresa May suffered embarrassing defeats on Tuesday, the
start of five days of parliamentary debate over her plans to leave the
European Union.
The pound rose off 17-month lows of $1.2659 <GBP=D3> hit on Tuesday to
around $1.2780, up 0.3 percent on the day, amid creeping optimism that
Britain could opt to stay in the EU after all.
Economists at JP Morgan reckon the odds of Britain staying in the EU
have increased to 40 percent from 20 percent previously, after the
European Court of Justice's advocate general said Britain should be
allowed to unilaterally revoke its departure notice.
The dollar has been undermined by the bond market moves and recession
fears, but it has recovered from two-week lows against a basket of
currencies <.DXY> to trade around 97, 0.10 percent lower on the day.
It rose 0.1 percent to 112.9 yen <JPY=> after losing 0.75 percent the
previous day against the safe-haven Japanese currency.
The threat of slowing economic activity also weighed on oil prices, but
Brent futures <LCOc1> trimmed losses to stand 0.4 percent lower at $61.8
per barrel. It had earlier fallen more than 1 percent.
(Reporting by Sujata Rao; additional reporting by Shinichi Saoshiro in
Tokyo, Virginia Furness and Saikat Chatterjee in London; editing by
Larry King)
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