Stocks struggle for momentum on inflation and taxation 
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		 [September 13, 2021]  By 
		Sujata Rao 
		 
		LONDON (Reuters) - World stocks started the week on the backfoot on 
		Monday, slipping to 2-1/2 week lows on further signs of accelerating 
		inflation as well as tax and regulatory pressures on the world's biggest 
		companies. 
		 
		Equity markets are down so far in September after a seven-month winning 
		streak, pressured by inflation which may prove less transitory than 
		flagged by central bankers, persistent and signs that governments are 
		keen to get more tax from companies and to make them toe a stricter 
		regulatory line. 
		 
		After Wall Street's worst run since February, futures hint at a firm 
		opening and European shares also rose. However, MSCI's world stocks 
		benchmark slipped 0.2% and an index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan 
		lost 1.2%. 
		 
		The latest source of worry is a Financial Times report that Beijing is 
		aiming to break up Alipay, the payments app owned by Jack Ma's Ant 
		Group. 
		 
		The report, which pushed the Chinese blue-chip index 0.5% lower, shows 
		there may be no let-up in the regulatory clobbering Chinese firms have 
		received this year. 
		 
		It follows a Friday court ruling on Apple that hit the iPhone maker's 
		shares, while more reports emerged at the weekend that U.S. Democrats 
		are mulling proposals to increase taxes on corporations and the wealthy. 
		  
						
		
		  
						
		 
		"We will see more of the state finding ways to extract funding from 
		those it deems most capable of providing it," said Tom O'Hara, portfolio 
		manager at Janus Henderson. 
		 
		Adding to concerns is the continued acceleration in inflation, with 
		Japan reporting wholesale prices at 13-year highs last month. That comes 
		on top of data showing factory gate inflation at more than decade-highs 
		in the United States and China, pressuring firms to pass on price rises 
		to consumers. 
		 
		"The market has been looking through inflation levels, assuming they are 
		transitory and that interest rates won't go up much but the conundrum is 
		that wherever we look, we see inflation, whether on supermarket shelves 
		or at the petrol pump," O'Hara added. 
		 
		"We will probably see more inflation and interest rate rises than people 
		think." 
		 
		A market gauge of euro zone inflation expectations rose to its highest 
		since mid-2015 on Monday in a further sign that investor perceptions 
		over the direction of future inflation is shifting. 
		  
						
		
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			A man wearing a protective face mask, following an outbreak of the 
			coronavirus, talks on his mobile phone in front of a screen showing 
			the Nikkei index outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan, February 26, 
			2020. REUTERS/Athit Perawongmetha/File Photo 
            
			
			  
		Investors will pay attention to upcoming Chinese data on retail sales 
		and industrial output which could show a further slowdown in the world's 
		second-biggest economy. 
		 
		U.S. consumer prices, due on Wednesday, are also seen easing a touch, 
		albeit to a still-high 4.2%, while the spread of the Delta COVID variant 
		may have softened retail sales. 
			
Banks continue to flag caution. A Deutsche Bank survey found market players 
expect a 5-10% equity market correction by year-end, with COVID and inflation 
seen as the main risks. 
 
BNP Paribas, while expecting the S&P 500 to stay unchanged by end-2021, 
highlighted risks from "higher yields and taxes, at a time when earnings 
momentum has slowed from excellent to good". 
 
They also lowered estimates for emerging markets, stemming from Chinese policy 
risks. 
 
Treasury 10-year yields, currently at 1.33%, posted their third weekly gain last 
week, the longest streak since mid-March and tension will likely build before 
the Sept. 21-22 U.S. Federal Reserve meeting.. 
 
The general air of risk aversion helped lift the dollar index to 92.80, up 0.24% 
and off recent lows of 91.941. 
 
Oil prices were at one-week highs above $73 a barrel due to shuttered output in 
the United States, the world's biggest producer, following damage from Hurricane 
Ida. 
 
Economic growth worries, however, have been seeping into the market, with 
producers' group OPEC expected to cut its forecasts for 2022 oil demand 
 
Graphic: Global Oil Demand Growth Forecasts - https://graphics.reuters.com/GLOBAL-OIL/lbvgngrzdpq/chart.png 
 
(Reporting by Sujata Rao; additional reporting by Wayne Cole in Sydney; editing 
by Emelia Sithole-Matarise) 
				 
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