Shares resilient after U.S. tech sell-off, vaccine trial
delay
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[September 09, 2020] By
Tom Wilson
LONDON (Reuters) - Shares on Wednesday
shrugged off heavy losses for U.S. tech stocks and a major drugmaker
delaying testing of a coronavirus vaccine, as investors kept faith in an
economic recovery from the coronavirus pandemic.
The broad Euro STOXX 600 <.STOXX> gained 0.5%, steadying after a hefty
decline a day earlier, sparked by a rout of a U.S. tech sector that has
been a key driver of the stunning recovery for global stocks from
coronavirus-induced lows.
Wall Street futures <ESc1> <NQc1> were pointing to a bounce for the
tech-heavy Nasdaq and the S&P 500, up 1.8% and 0.7% respectively.
London shares <.FTSE> gained 0.7%, helped by a pound buffeted by worries
about a no-deal Brexit that could hit Britain's economy. Indexes in
Frankfurt <.GDAXI> and Paris <.FCHI> also gained.
Utilities <.SX6P>, telecoms <.SXKP> and healthcare <.SXDP> all rose by
between 0.6%-2%.
AstraZeneca <AZN.L> shares fell 1.4% after global trials of its
experimental COVID-19 vaccine were paused due to an unexplained illness
in a study participant. It clawed back heavier losses incurred in
premarket trading.
The news had earlier unnerved investors in Asia hoping that the quick
introduction of a vaccine would accelerate the recovery for global
economies ravaged by the pandemic.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan
<.MIAPJ0000PUS> slid 1%, with indexes in Australia <.AXJO>, China
<.CSI300> and Japan <.N225> all skidding.
The Japanese yen <JPY=EBS> climbed to a one-week high as investors
sought safety, before giving up some of its gains to last stand 0.1% up
at 106.13 per dollar.
With Big Tech one of the biggest main winners in the global recovery
from the coronavirus, benefiting from stay-at-home spenders, investors
were mostly sanguine about the sector's prospects, even after the
bruising sell-off.
The Nasdaq has shed $1.5 trillion since its Sept. 2 high.
"This has been a correction that was probably not that surprising, given
the move in August in the tech sector," said Salman Baig, an investment
manager at Unigestion, adding that the outlook for Big Tech was
positive.
"It's exactly those companies that are new economy - they are benefiting
because of their model, the industry, the virus."
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People wearing protective masks, following the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) outbreak, are reflected on a screen showing stock prices
outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan August 31, 2020. REUTERS/Kim
Kyung-Hoon
Those attributes have sparked heavy bets from the likes of SoftBank, which has
traded heavily in tech stocks call options.
The bets have unnerved investors worried about its exposure to the sector.
SoftBank Group <9984.T> shares lost 3% in Tokyo, extending this week's slump
that has wiped $15 billion from its market capitalisation.
The MSCI world equity index <.MIWD00000PUS>, which tracks shares in nearly 50
countries, was down 0.2%.
Despite renewed appetite for stocks, safe-haven German government bond yields
<DE10IT10=RR> fell to their lowest in two-weeks. The fall in tech shares also
boosted demand for U.S. Treasuries, even though heavy supply this week is
expected to weigh on the bonds.
VACCINE "BLOW"
The remarkable rally in global shares from their March lows has been driven in
part by expectations that a COVID-19 vaccine would be found, helping to
accelerate the economic recovery from the coronavirus pandemic.
Yet AstraZeneca's move dims prospects for an early rollout of its vaccine,
described by the World Health Organization as probably the world's leading
candidate and the most advanced in terms of development.
Deutsche Bank strategists called the suspension of the trials "a blow".
Elsewhere, sterling <GBP=D3> was stalked by fears that Britain is preparing to
undercut its Brexit divorce treaty.
Britain will set out later on Wednesday new details of its blueprint for life
outside the European Union, publishing legislation a minister acknowledged would
break international law and which could sour trade talks.
Sterling dipped 0.4% to $1.2928, its lowest since the end of July, and also fell
the same amount against the euro <EURGBP=D3> to 90.70 pence, its lowest for six
weeks. One-month implied volatility also hit its highest level in nearly five
months.
(For Reuters Live Markets blog on European and UK stock markets, please click
on: [LIVE/]; Reporting by Tom Wilson; Editing by Alexandra Hudson)
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