Stocks stall on trade jitters, German economy angst
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[April 04, 2019]
By Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - European and Asian
shares stepped back from eight-month highs on Thursday, as investors
took money off the table amid fresh concerns about U.S.-China trade
talks and as dire data from Germany signaled trouble for Europe.
Germany's figures showed industrial orders fell at their sharpest rate
in more than two years in February, driven largely by a slump in foreign
demand.
It compounded signs that Europe's largest economy has had a feeble start
to the year, left the euro stuck at near $1.12, sent German Bund yields
back below zero and looked set to end a four-day run of gains for share
traders. [.EU][/FRX]
Futures pointed to a flat restart for Wall Street later too. MSCI's
broadest index of Asia shares also lost 0.3 percent overnight after five
straight days of gains had taken it to the highest level since late
August.
Losses were led by Australia and New Zealand while Hong Kong, the
Philippines and Indian markets were also in the red and Japan's Nikkei
paused near a recent one-month top.
Chinese shares were firmer again though, with the blue-chip index ending
up 1 percent which left them at a new one-year high and up nearly 40
percent since the start of the year. [.SS]
"We are expecting quite a constructive agreement between the U.S. and
China when it comes to trade," said AllianceBernstein China Portfolio
Manager John Lin.
He added it was probably now a consensus view among major investors and
if it proved right, would raise other questions such as whether China's
government would "keep its foot on the (stimulus) pedal or ease off a
bit."
Risk sentiment has otherwise been supported this week by signs of
progress in Sino-U.S. trade talks. White House economic adviser Larry
Kudlow said on Wednesday the two sides aimed to bridge differences
during talks, which could extend beyond three days this week.
Investors are keen to see if ongoing talks lead to an
earlier-than-anticipated meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and
his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping to sign an accord. Trump will meet
Vice Premier Liu He at the White House later.
"Also an important question would be whether an agreement would be
sufficient to revive business sentiment and the global trade cycle,"
J.P. Morgan Asset Management Asia Pacific Chief Market Strategist Tai
Hui added.
"We believe on the margin it would help, but practically all investors
we’ve spoken to in Asia in the past six months believe friction will
still flare up from time to time.
Various media reported on Thursday the United States wanted to set a
2025 target for China to meet trade pledges.
The plan would see China committing to buy more U.S. commodities,
including soybeans and energy products, and allow full foreign ownership
for U.S. companies operating in China as a binding pledge.
[to top of second column] |
The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock
exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, April 2, 2019. REUTERS/Staff
"We're covering issues that have never really been covered before, including
enforcement," Kudlow had said.
For a graphic on Germany laggard in Europe (April 4), see - https://tmsnrt.rs/2CTbsI0
DROOPY RUPEE
Traders were also squaring off positions ahead of U.S. jobs data due on Friday
after earlier disappointments this week. Wednesday's figures showed services
sector activity hit a more than 19-month low in March while private payrolls
grew less than expected, hinting at softness in the world's largest economy.
In the foreign exchange market, moves were modest after bigger swings overnight
when all major currencies gained against the safe-haven yen.
India's rupee did suffer its biggest fall of the year after the second cut in
interest rates in short succession but other than that it was thin gruel.
The greenback was just starting to firm against a basket of currencies at 97.16
ahead of U.S. trading though it inched down against the yen.
The euro barely budged from $1.1225 as the minutes of the European Central
Bank's last meeting confirmed it has given up on raising its rates this year,
while Sterling ticked down $1.3140 as British Prime Minister Theresa May held
talks with the opposition Labour Party in a bid to break the Brexit deadlock.
The lower house of Britain's parliament late on Wednesday also narrowly passed
legislation which would force May to seek a delay to Brexit in order to prevent
Britain leaving without a deal on April 12.
"We are disappointed that MPs (members of parliament) have chosen to back the
bill," May's spokesman said on Thursday, warning it would tie the UK's hands in
Brexit negotiations.
In commodity markets, spot gold nudged up to $1,292 per ounce, while oil prices
shook off a surprise build up in U.S. crude inventories and record production to
inch Brent back toward the $70 a barrel mark at $69.50. [O/R]
Global benchmark Brent has gained nearly 30 percent this year, while WTI has
gained nearly 40 percent. Prices have been underpinned by tightening global
supplies and signs of demand picking up.
"There is a clear bias to the upside with the supply restrictions," said Michael
McCarthy, chief market strategist at CMC Markets in Sydney, pointing to supply
cuts by OPEC and others, along with sanctions on Iran.
(Additional reporting by Swati Pandey and Wayne Cole in Sydney and Aaron
Sheldrick in Tokyo; Editing by Jon Boyle, William Maclean)
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