Shares and pound splutter as UK dishes out budget gruel
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[November 17, 2022]
By Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - Nagging recession and
interest rate worries had Europe's markets spluttering on Thursday, and
the pound started to sag as Britain sought to put its disastrous recent
fiscal experiment behind it with an austere-looking budget.
Trading got off to a choppy start as optimism about Siemens' < SIEGn.DE>
earnings and that the European Central Bank might slow its rate hikes
gave way to the selling that dogged Wall Street and Asia
overnight.[.EU][.N][.SS][.T]
That was driven by renewed Fed policymaker talk that rates could shoot
up further. It meant the dollar was fractionally higher after a recent
7% slump, though Europe's lower government debt yields suggested the
bond markets were largely indifferent.
Sterling had gone from $1.193 to $1.1850 against the greenback in London
by the time the country's new finance minister Jeremy Hunt began his
budget plan with news of 55 billion pounds ($64.93 billion) of tax rises
and spending cuts.
He and Prime Minister Rishi Sunak hope it will restore confidence after
former PM Liz Truss' unfunded tax cut plans caused widespread panic,
sent the pound to an all-time low and forced Truss to quit after just 50
days in charge.
DoubleLine portfolio manager Bill Campbell said the pound's rebound over
the last month meant the budget's main headlines were probably already
priced in, and that Britain's experience may well be mirrored elsewhere,
especially with recessions looming and an ongoing energy crisis.
"The market has basically told the UK government that it is not gong to
accept anything too aggressive on the fiscal stimulus front," Campbell
said.
"It seems like we are moving into a fairly risky environment," he added,
referring to likelihood that EU countries will try to frontload their
borrowings next year. "I think it's highly likely that we could see some
repeats of what happened in the UK".
Overnight in Asia, grim signals from Micron Technology about excess
inventories and sluggish demand sent chipmaker stocks sprawling.
On Wall Street, stronger-than-expected U.S. retail sales had suggested
the Federal Reserve was unlikely to relax its battle with inflation and
futures pointed to another modest dip later. [.N]
That all fuelled concerns about the economic outlook, with the U.S.
Treasury yield curve remaining deeply inverted in European trading and
suggesting investors are braced for recession.
The 2-year/10-year curve had closed beneath -60 bps for the first time
since 1982 on Wednesday "which is concerning when you consider its
historic accuracy as a leading indicator of recessions," Deutsche Bank's
Jim Reid said.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index had closed 1.15% lower after tech stocks
slumped as much as 4% at one point. Mainland Chinese shares also
wobbled, with blue chips there falling 0.5% having ripped 10% higher
this month.
Japan's Nikkei lost 0.35% and South Korea's Kospi dropped 1.4%, each led
by declines in heavyweight chip players.
The Philadelphia SE Semiconductor Index slumped 4.3% and the tech-heavy
Nasdaq had dropped 1.5% after Micron said it would reduce memory chip
supply and make more cuts to its capital spending plan.
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Pound and Dollar banknotes are seen in
this picture illustration taken June 13, 2017. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File
Photo
FED UP
Wall Street futures indicate little in the way of respite at the
open, pointing to 0.5%-0.6% falls on the Nasdaq or the S&P later.
[.N]
Traders will also scrutinise speeches from Fed officials on Thursday
for hints about rate hikes. Regional Fed Presidents Raphael Bostic,
Loretta Mester and Neel Kashkari are all due to speak.
Hawkish remarks from Fed officials on Wednesday added to doubts
about a shift in policy, with San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly
- until recently one of the most dovish officials - saying a pause
was off the table and that "somewhere between 4.75 and 5.25 seems a
reasonable place" for the Fed to aim for with rates.
Money markets give 93% odds that the Fed will slow to a half-point
rate increase on Dec. 14, with a 7% probability of another 75 basis
point increase. Traders still see the terminal rate close to 5% by
next summer, up from the current policy rate of 3.75-4%.
The dollar's DXY index was up almost 0.5% as its momentum built
again. The euro down at $1.03, the risk-sensitive Aussie dollar
tumbled 1% and China's yuan weakened 0.35% as new COVID cases caused
concerns that officials could order more lockdowns.
Japan's yen couldn't do much either, dipping 139.85 per dollar
although as it continued to trade around its highest level for three
months. The dollar plunged 3.7% last week when U.S. consumer
inflation data for October came in lower than expected.
"Fed commentary, like the resilient spending numbers, gave little
succour for anyone looking for an imminent pivot," with caution
permeating markets as a result, Ted Nugent, an economist at National
Australia Bank, wrote in a client note.
U.S. 10-year Treasury yields bounced modestly from a six-week low at
3.671% hit overnight in Tokyo trading, last standing at about 3.72%,
while the two-year yield consolidated near its lowest level since
Oct. 28 around 4.37%.
Gold slid 0.6% to about $1,763 an ounce against a firmer dollar.
Crude oil steadied in Europe after settling more than a dollar lower
overnight, following the resumption of Russian oil shipments via the
Druzhba pipeline to Hungary and as rising COVID-19 cases in China
weighed on sentiment. [O/R]
Brent crude futures were last at $92.30 a barrel have slipped below
$92 overnight, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude
hovered at $84.85 a barrel.
($1 = 0.8471 pounds)
(Additional reporting by Kevin Buckland in Tokyo; editing by Barbara
Lewis and Bernadette Baum)
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