Stocks weighed down by virus angst, lack of stimulus
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[September 18, 2020] By
Tom Arnold
LONDON (Reuters) - Stocks struggled on
Friday on investors' concerns about a resurgence in coronavirus cases
and lingering disappointment that central banks merely affirmed their
monetary support this week without promising new stimulus.
The dollar was back to near the bottom of its recent range following its
brief journey higher after Wednesday's U.S. Federal Reserve meeting.
The Fed promised to keep rates low for a long time but gave no new hints
about any further monetary support. The Bank of England and the Bank of
Japan sounded more open to further stimulus on Thursday but also took no
action.
Tensions in Asia also bubbled up after Taiwan scrambled fighter jets as
multiple Chinese aircraft approached the island during Chinese military
exercises.
In choppy trade, the pan-European STOXX 600 was flat, clawing back from
earlier losses, but the FTSE was 0.2% lower as Britain announced
restrictions for more areas of the country to tackle rising coronavirus
rates.
The mood remained cautious as France confirmed 10,593 new coronavirus
infections on Thursday, its highest single-day count since the pandemic
began, and Britain saw a surge in cases.
Spain's Bankia slipped 4% after Caixabank valued it at 4.3 billion euros
($5.10 billion) as part of a deal that will create Spain's biggest
domestic bank.
Euronext added 5.6% after London Stock Exchange said it had entered into
exclusive talks to sell Borsa Italia to the French exchange operator.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan added 0.5%.
Stocks in China made their strongest gains in three weeks, with the
CSI300 index adding 2.2%, a move led by financial companies.
The U.S.-heavy MSCI world shares index was up 0.2%, heading for its
first weekly gain in three weeks.
Signalling a stemming of Thursday's losses on Wall Street, S&P 500
futures <ESc1 were last up 0.1% while Nasdaq 100 futures were up 0.5%.
But analysts warned about potential volatility related to a quarterly
expiration of U.S. stock options, stock index futures and index option
contracts, known as "quadruple witching".
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"You tend to get a lot of volume going through markets on days like this and
that can exacerbate volatility," said James Athey, investment director at
Aberdeen Standard Investments.
"Recently, markets have been listless and lacking any sort of driver in either
direction. In a bigger picture sense, politics will be an increasing focus until
the end of the year, with the U.S. elections and Brexit negotiations, which
don't seem to be progressing at all, and European elections, with Italian
regional elections next week."
YUAN, YEN STAND OUT
U.S. consumer confidence data is due later on Friday. Figures on Thursday showed
the recovery in the U.S. labour market is stalling.
That meant the dollar extended overnight losses and was down 0.1%, set for a
weekly loss.
Shrugging off a dovish-sounding Bank of Japan, the Japanese yen gained versus
the dollar, staying close to the seven-week high hit on Thursday, at 104.380.
The New Zealand dollar was one of the biggest movers, gaining overnight and
hitting its highest in 1-1/2 years in early London trading after the finance
minister sounded positive about the economy in television interviews.
The yuan was up above 1% for the week and on track for its longest weekly
winning streak since early 2018 as bond inflows into China's capital-controlled
economy buoy the currency.
"We see no signals from the (People's Bank of China's) daily yuan fixing that
suggest authorities are concerned about recent trends," said Nomura analysts in
a note. "We remain short USD/CNH through both cash and options."
In European bond markets, Italy's 10-year bond yield hit its lowest level since
early March and was last at 0.945%, down 1.1 basis points on the day.
In commodity markets, oil's earlier rally, spurred in part by Saudi Arabia
pressing allies to stick to output quotas, faded.
Brent crude was flat at $40.97 a barrel, while U.S. oil futures were up 0.1% to
$41.01 a barrel.
(Additional reporting by Tom Westbrook in Singapore; Editing by Catherine Evans
and Hugh Lawson)
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