G20 nerves hit Europe stocks; dollar slips to three-month low
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[June 24, 2019] By
Karin Strohecker
LONDON (Reuters) - European stocks stumbled
and the dollar hit three-month lows on Monday as hopes waned for
progress in Sino-U.S. trade talks at this week's G20 meeting and fears
of an escalation in Iran tensions flared up.
Investors are waiting to see if Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping
can de-escalate a trade war that is damaging the global economy and
souring business confidence. The leaders will meet during a G20 summit
in Japan.
Pan-European STOXX 600 fell 0.2%, reflecting similar losses in Paris.
Stocks in London were little changed.
Germany's export-sensitive DAX index fell 0.6% after a profit warning
from Daimler sent the Mercedes-Benz maker's shares some 4.2% lower. In
addition, data showed that German business morale in June fell to its
lowest since November 2014, adding weight to expectations that Europe's
largest economy shrank in the second quarter.
Nonetheless, gains in Asia saw the MSCI regional as well as the broader
global stocks gauges rise again toward last week's six-week highs hit
last week. Wall Street also looked in line for more gains after closing
lower on Friday. S&P 500 e-minis pointed to a 0.2% rise at the open.
"G20 is turning into a high-stakes poker game for risk and if the
sideline talks between Trump and Xi fail and trigger an escalation in
tariffs, the odds of a full-blown global recession increase
exponentially," said Stephen Innes, managing partner at Vanguard
Markets.
On Monday, Chinese Vice Commerce Minister Wang Shouwen said China and
the U.S. should be willing to compromise in trade talks and not insist
only on what each side wants.
U.S. Vice President Mike Pence's decision on Friday to call off a
planned China speech was also considered a positive sign. Pence had
upset China with a fierce speech in October that laid out a litany of
complaints ranging from state surveillance to human-rights abuses.
Still, most analysts doubt the two sides will come to any meaningful
agreement. Tensions are reaching beyond tariffs, particularly after
Washington blacklisted Huawei, the world's biggest telecoms gear maker,
effectively banning U.S. companies from doing business with it.
"Any high hopes ahead of the G20 meeting may be disappointed," said
Benjamin Schroeder, senior rates strategist at ING in Amsterdam. "In the
end uncertainty will persist and central banks could still be pushed
closer to invoking their contingency plans."
The U.S. Commerce Department said on Friday it was adding several
Chinese companies and a government-owned institute involved in
supercomputing with military applications to its national security
"entity list" that bars them from buying U.S. parts and components
without government approval.
A Chinese newspaper said FedEx Corp was likely to be added to Beijing's
"unreliable entities list".
U.S. markets had reached record highs after last week's signals by the
Federal Reserve that it may cut interest rates soon to bolster the U.S.
economy. [.N]
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The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock
exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, June 18, 2019. REUTERS/Staff/File
Photo
However, that weakened U.S. currency, causing a dollar index to slip 0.1% lower
to 96.11 after its biggest weekly drop in four months last week.
The dollar has led a broad selloff in major currencies as global central banks
signaled a dovish outlook on monetary policy amid growing signs of a weak global
economy.
The dollar fetched 107.29 yen , having slipped to as low as 107.045 on Friday,
the lowest level since its flash crash on Jan. 3.
"The market is not expecting more Fed rate cuts than it had so far but that the
reasoning behind them is being interpreted in a different manner," Commerzbank's
head of FX and Commodity Research Ulrich Leuchtmann wrote in a note to clients.
"While for a long time the expected weakening of growth, fears of a recession
and low inflation were used as reasons for rate cuts, another reason has now
been added to the list: the Fed caving in to the White House."
The euro rose to a three-month high of $1.1393 against the dollar. [FRX/]
In developing markets, the Turkish lira strengthened as much as 2% after
Turkey's main opposition won a re-run election in Istanbul for mayor on Sunday,
a blow to President Tayyip Erdogan.
Bitcoin pulled back from 15-month highs after jumping more than 10% over the
weekend. Analysts said the gains came amid growing optimism over the adoption of
cryptocurrencies after Facebook announced its Libra digital coin.
The glum German data pushed bond yields across the euro zone lower, reinforcing
ECB rate-cut expectations.
Economic woes, looming U.S. interest rate cuts and flaring tensions between
Tehran and Washington drove safe-haven gold higher. It stood at $1,407.9 per
ounce, not far from Friday's six-year high of $1,410.78.
The rising tensions between Iran and the United States, after Iran shot down an
American drone, also pushed oil prices higher. U.S. Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo -- who met with Saudia Arabia's king and crown prince on Monday -- warned
"significant" sanctions on Tehran would be announced.
Brent crude futures stood at $65.16 per barrel, near Friday's three-week high of
$65.76. U.S. crude futures were up 0.7% at $57.84, its highest in over three
weeks. [O/R]
(Reporting by Karin Strohecker in London, additional reporting by Dhara
Ranasinghe and Sujata Rao in London)
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