
Global shares stall as tech stocks rebound, with all eyes on the ECB policy meeting
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London — The tech-led reboot of stock markets stalled in Europe on Thursday as traders pulled back to hear just how twitchy the European Central Bank (ECB) has become about the euro’s run-up in recent months.
The ECB’s upcoming meeting, along with emergency Brexit talks in London after negotiations turned chaotic again, and wilting commodity markets kept the bulls firmly on the leash.
An early push from the pan-European Stoxx 600 quickly faltered as tech struggled, the euro and government bonds gained ahead of the ECB meeting, and drooping oil and metals prices hit the region’s drillers and miners.
Analysts were waiting to see whether reports that the ECB will fractionally revise up its coronavirus-battered economic and inflation forecasts later would ultimately affect the chances of a further ramping up of stimulus, which would rein in the euro.
“What happens at the ECB today is quite important for global markets,” said TD Securities’ European head of currency strategy Ned Rumpeltin. “There is still one trade, which is reflate or die,” he said, referring to stimulus aid lifting asset prices. “So the degree to which the ECB either takes that one step forward or one step back today will be important.”
Overnight, MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares excluding Japan had snapped its longest losing streak since February with a 0.7% gain. Japan’s Nikkei rose 0.9% and Chinese blue chips rose 0.8%.
Markets in Sydney and Hong Kong were just better than flat though and, in a reminder of the risks, Jakarta nosedived 5% on plans to re-introduce Covid-19 social restrictions in the Indonesian capital.
Like Europe though, Wall Street futures traded down between 0.5% and 0.7% ahead of trading there.
Mizuho Bank’s head of economics and strategy in Singapore, Vishnu Varathan, said investors were grappling with whether this month’s steep US tech sell-off was really done, and beyond that an increasingly uncertain US political outlook and persistent China-US tensions.
Concerns about demand for fuel also had oil prices back under pressure, in an indication of wavering confidence in global growth. Brent crude futures fell back to $40.45 a barrel after bouncing back from a three-month low overnight. US crude WTI futures slipped 0.8% to $37.68 a barrel.
Bond buyers also returned after a tepid response to a $35bn US 10-year auction overnight, pushing the yield on US 10-year debt down by a whisker to 0.6968%.
Euro waits for ECB
Most ...
The ECB’s upcoming meeting, along with emergency Brexit talks in London after negotiations turned chaotic again, and wilting commodity markets kept the bulls firmly on the leash.
An early push from the pan-European Stoxx 600 quickly faltered as tech struggled, the euro and government bonds gained ahead of the ECB meeting, and drooping oil and metals prices hit the region’s drillers and miners.
Analysts were waiting to see whether reports that the ECB will fractionally revise up its coronavirus-battered economic and inflation forecasts later would ultimately affect the chances of a further ramping up of stimulus, which would rein in the euro.
“What happens at the ECB today is quite important for global markets,” said TD Securities’ European head of currency strategy Ned Rumpeltin. “There is still one trade, which is reflate or die,” he said, referring to stimulus aid lifting asset prices. “So the degree to which the ECB either takes that one step forward or one step back today will be important.”
Overnight, MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares excluding Japan had snapped its longest losing streak since February with a 0.7% gain. Japan’s Nikkei rose 0.9% and Chinese blue chips rose 0.8%.
Markets in Sydney and Hong Kong were just better than flat though and, in a reminder of the risks, Jakarta nosedived 5% on plans to re-introduce Covid-19 social restrictions in the Indonesian capital.
Like Europe though, Wall Street futures traded down between 0.5% and 0.7% ahead of trading there.
Mizuho Bank’s head of economics and strategy in Singapore, Vishnu Varathan, said investors were grappling with whether this month’s steep US tech sell-off was really done, and beyond that an increasingly uncertain US political outlook and persistent China-US tensions.
Concerns about demand for fuel also had oil prices back under pressure, in an indication of wavering confidence in global growth. Brent crude futures fell back to $40.45 a barrel after bouncing back from a three-month low overnight. US crude WTI futures slipped 0.8% to $37.68 a barrel.
Bond buyers also returned after a tepid response to a $35bn US 10-year auction overnight, pushing the yield on US 10-year debt down by a whisker to 0.6968%.
Euro waits for ECB
Most ...