Rising bond yields keep world stocks on shaky ground
Send a link to a friend
[February 08, 2018]
By Dhara Ranasinghe
LONDON (Reuters) - World stock markets
remained on shaky ground on Thursday as U.S. bond yields crept back
toward four-year highs after congressional leaders reached a two-year
budget deal to raise government spending by almost $300 billion.
While the deal was a rare display of bipartisanship that should stave
off a government shutdown, it looks set to widen the U.S. federal
deficit further and could fan inflation, prompting the Federal Reserve
to lift interest rates faster.
Euro zone yields were also higher on the day while a hawkish message
from the Bank of England on interest rates, pushed UK stocks down around
1 percent and lifted yields on UK government bonds to the highest since
2015.
All that is keeping equities on tenterhooks.
While MSCI's world index has risen off two-month lows hit earlier this
week, the tentative rebound from Wednesday's has fizzled. That pushed
the index some 0.2 percent lower while European bourses were weighed
down by commodity and technology stocks.
The pan-European STOXX 600 share index fell 0.5 percent, and is still
down almost 3 percent year-to-date.
Wall Street too looks set for a weaker session, with U.S. stock futures,
down around a quarter percent, as investors eye the potential for higher
inflation and borrowing costs.
That has "toned down the straight line move on equity markets, led to a
more volatile environment and limited the potential for equities,"
Francois Savary, chief investment officer at wealth manager Prime
Partners said, referring to investors' bullishness prior to the recent
correction.
"I don't think markets can recover immediately (from the shock), there
needs to be a stabilization phase".
The previous two sessions saw the heaviest volumes traded on the STOXX
600 index in more than seven months.
Volumes on U.S. exchanges meanwhile exceeded 9 billion shares for a
fourth straight day on Wednesday, a figure surpassed just once before in
the past seven months, according to Deutsche Bank.
In Asia, MSCI's index of emerging Asian equities remained near six-week
lows.
[to top of second column] |
A visitor is seen as market prices are reflected in a glass window
at the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE) in Tokyo, Japan, February 6, 2018.
REUTERS/Toru Hanai
Focus was on China, where Shanghai's benchmark index hit a six-month low after
Beijing resumed an outbound investment scheme after a two-year hiatus, granting
licenses to about a dozen global money managers, sources said.
SPENDING SOARS
The recent selloff, sparked by last Friday's jump in Treasury yields, sent the
VIX index, considered Wall Street's "fear gauge", spiralling. The index is down
just below 30 on Thursday, but that is more than twice the levels seen in the
past few months.
Bond yields got a fresh impetus on Wednesday from U.S., lawmakers' deal on the
budget, with 10-year U.S. yields back up to 2.84 percent, near Monday's
four-year peak of 2.885 percent.
The fear now is that alongside the economic boost President Donald Trump's tax
cut plans may deliver, higher deficit spending could overheat the already strong
U.S. economy and accelerate inflation to levels not seen in over a decade.
The Senate and the House were both expected to vote on the deal on Thursday.
"The news yesterday has set up a test for 3 percent on 10-year Treasury yields,"
Savary said.
European bond yields also rose, lifted by the prospect of increased fiscal
spending after Wednesday's coalition government deal in Germany.
UK government bond yields rose too after the Bank of England said interest rates
probably needed to rise sooner and by a bit more than it thought three months
ago and raised economic growth forecasts for Britain.
British two-year government bond yields rose to the highest since December 2015
after the statement, rising around 6 basis points to 0.706 percent. Sterling
rose around one percent against the dollar and euro.
(Additional reporting by Hideyuki Sano in Tokyo and Sujata Rao in London;
Editing by Kevin Liffey and Janet Lawrence)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |