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						Global stocks drop as Hong Kong violence rattles 
						investors
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		 [November 11, 2019]  By 
		Tom Wilson 
 LONDON (Reuters) - Shares around the globe 
		fell on Monday, buffeted by escalating violence in Hong Kong that pushed 
		Asian stocks to their worst day since August and stoked demand for the 
		safe-haven yen and gold.
 
 In the 24th straight week of pro-democracy unrest, Hong Kong police shot 
		and wounded a protester as the Chinese-ruled territory saw rare 
		working-hours violence.
 
 The MSCI world equity index <.MIWD00000PUS>, which tracks shares in 47 
		countries, slipped 0.2%, with Hong Kong's Hang Seng index <.HSI> falling 
		2.6% and leading losses across Asia.
 
 There, MSCI's widest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan 
		<.MIAPJ0000PUS> fell 1.2% from six-month highs to set a course for its 
		worst day since late August. Chinese blue chips <.CSI300> dropped 1.8%.
 
 The nerves spread to Europe, too.
 
 The broad Euro STOXX 600 <.STOXX> fell 0.4%, with London shares <.FTSE> 
		losing 1.1%. Wall Street futures gauges also suffered, suggesting losses 
		of around 0.4% <ESc1>.
 
		
		 
		Some investors said markets could be affected by any further escalation 
		of the violence in Hong Kong, where protesters are angry about what they 
		see as police brutality and meddling by Beijing in the freedoms 
		guaranteed to the former British colony.
 "At some stage I think it is likely that there will be a more 
		fully-fledged crackdown," said Stéphane Barbier de la Serre, a 
		strategist at Makor Capital Markets.
 
 "And if you see a crackdown, you could see markets collapsing."
 
 The violence sent investors running for assets perceived as safe havens 
		and away from riskier currencies.
 
 Gold rose 0.5%, rebounding from a three-month low touched on Friday to 
		reach $1,465.36 per ounce.
 
 The Japanese yen <JPY=EBS>, which often strengthens in times of global 
		political or economic turmoil, strengthened 0.3% against the dollar. 
		China's yuan, in contrast, weakened 0.3% to 7 per dollar in offshore 
		trade <CNH=EBS>.
 
 Sterling <GBP=D3> gained 0.3% against the dollar after figures showed 
		that Britain's economy had dodged a recession - but grown at its slowest 
		annual pace in almost 10 years.
 
 It was last trading at $1.28.
 
 The GDP data compounded a warning from Moody's on Friday that it might 
		cut its rating on Britain's sovereign debt again, as it lowered the 
		outlook on Britain's current rating to negative from stable.
 
		
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			A passerby walks past in front of a stock quotation board outside a 
			brokerage in Tokyo, Japan, May 10, 2019. REUTERS/Issei Kato 
            
			 
TRADE WAR
 Investors were also focused on the U.S-China trade talks.
 
 After a bout of optimism last week over prospects that Washington and Beijing 
could reach an initial deal to alleviate their 18-month old dispute, doubts 
gnawed at markets again.
 
 On Saturday, U.S. President Donald Trump said talks had moved more slowly than 
he would have liked. He said reports that the United States was willing to lift 
tariffs were incorrect, adding that Beijing wanted a deal more than he did.
 
 Still, some market players said Trump's comments fitted an established pattern 
of optimistic rhetoric being followed by a more skeptical tone.
 
 A deal was still likely, they said.
 
 "It's the usual two steps forward and one step backwards," said Adam Cole, head 
of FX strategy at RBC Capital Markets.
 
 "We are probably still moving in the direction (of a deal), and that's the way 
the market is priced on balance."
 
 The uncertainty over trade weighed on commodities markets commodities.
 
 Oil lost 1.3%, with concerns over trade and worries about oversupply weighed on 
the market. Brent crude was down 82 cents to $61.88 by late morning.
 
 In Europe, Spanish government bond yields held their ground after a weekend 
election delivered a fractured parliament and set the stage for difficult talks 
to form a ruling coalition.
 
 The far-right surged in the poll, the fourth in as many years. Spain's 10-year 
bond yield was flat at 0.40% <ES10YT=RR>.
 
 Most other major bond yields across the euro zone were little changed, holding 
below highs reached on Friday as investors showed scant appetite for risk in the 
wake of the Hong Kong violence.
 
 U.S. bond markets were closed for the Veteran's Day holiday.
 
 (Reporting by Tom Wilson; Editing by Kevin Liffey)
 
				 
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