Shares slide on 'powerful cocktail' of China slump,
Treasuries and Italy
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[October 08, 2018]
By Virginia Furness
LONDON (Reuters) - European markets fell on
Monday as investor confidence took a knock from last week's spike in
Treasury yields and from a Chinese market slump brought on by concern
that an escalating trade war with the United States could curb China's
growth.
Chinese markets re-opened after a week's holiday, and stocks recorded
their biggest one-day drop since February, with the Shanghai-Shenzhen
CSI300 down more than 4 percent for only the second time in more than 2
1/2 years.
This helped set the tone for the European open and stock markets fell
with the pan-European index down 0.8 percent and Germany's DAX 0.8
percent lower.
The MSCI world equity index, which tracks shares in 47 countries, fell
0.35 percent.
The fall in global equities boosted demand for the dollar as investors
rushed for safety. Against a basket of its rivals the U.S. currency rose
0.3 percent, edging towards a 14-month high hit in mid-August.
Investor fears of higher U.S. interest rates, global protectionism,
emerging market weakness and an Italian budget row have all combined to
send equities sharply into the red in October, with world stocks down
more than 2 percent already.
"Europe is stuck between China and the US, it is feeling the heat from
draining dollar liquidity and the continued anti-trade rhetoric," said
Talib Sheikh, manager of the Jupiter Flexible Income Fund.
"We don’t think this is a dip to be buying across the eurozone. Nothing
there looks desperately appealing, and if the macro headwinds don’t look
to abate, further cheapening of valuations looks to be warranted."
The dark mood in China sent shivers across Asian markets and will add to
investors nervousness -- the MSCI benchmark emerging markets equity
index dropped 0.8 percent to its lowest level since May 2017 and is now
down 5.5 percent in October, the biggest monthly loss since January
2016.
Growth concerns led the People's Bank of China (PBOC) on Sunday to cut
the level of cash that banks must hold as reserves, aimed at lowering
financing costs as policymakers worry about the fallout from the tariff
row with the United States.
"China just cut reserve requirement ratios and expanded monetary policy,
which is a response to the fact that China’s economy is slowing down,
but the market doesn’t believe there is enough stimulus to cut the
slowdown," said Guillermo Felices, a senior strategist at BNP Paribas
Asset Management, calling the current concerns markets face a "powerful
cocktail".
"They've injected more liquidity into the market to contain the
slowdown, which has already translated into weaker equity prices."
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An investor watches a board showing stock information at a brokerage
office in Beijing, China October 8, 2018. REUTERS/Jason Lee
The Chinese slide comes after U.S. Treasury yields hit seven-year highs on
Friday, following data that signaled a continued tightening of the labor market
and increased inflationary pressures - adding to the reasons for the U.S.
Federal Reserve to continue with its hiking cycle.
Diverging monetary policy between Beijing and Washington pushed the offshore
yuan to its lowest since mid-August at 6.937 against the dollar.
Brazil outperformed other emerging markets on Monday after far-right former army
captain Jair Bolsonaro won nearly half the votes in the first round of
presidential elections on Sunday.
London-listed Brazilian ETFs were up 6-7 percent, while the real was forecast to
open stronger.
U.S. trading is likely to be muted on Monday, with markets closed for Columbus
Day.
ITALY UNDER PRESSURE
Renewed concerns over Italy's budget also added to the risk-off tone in European
equities. The FTSE MIB skidded 2.3 percent to its lowest since 21 April 2017, as
government bonds yields hit new highs, putting pressure on bank shares.
The European Commission has told Italy it is concerned about its budget deficit
plans for the next three years since they breach what the EU asked the country
to do in July, but Rome insisted on Saturday it would "not retreat" from its
spending plans.
Italy's 10-year government bond hit four-and-a-half-year highs on Monday
<IT10YT=RR>, and its spread over Germany reached 309 basis points, its widest in
five years. As a result, the euro fell 0.44 percent to $1.1469, close to its
lowest since Aug, 20.
Germany's 10-year government bond, the benchmark for the region, remains close
to four-month highs at 0.559 percent.
Oil dropped back to $82.93 per barrel after Washington said it may grant waivers
to sanctions against Iran's oil exports next month, and as Saudi Arabia was said
to be replacing any potential shortfall from Iran.
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(Reporting by Virginia Furness, additional reporting by Andrew Galbraith;
editing by Larry King)
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