Global Markets: Bears prowl world markets, maul Chinese stocks as trade tensions simmer

Reuters  |  LONDON 

By Rao

LONDON (Reuters) - A 2 percent slide in Chinese equities on Wednesday and a fresh weakening in the yuan highlighted mounting stress on the world's number two economy from trade tensions with the United States, while global stocks slipped to approach two-month lows.

While the prospect of trade protectionism and tit-for-tat tariffs are raising serious fears for the world economy, the growth and inflation outlook is being further complicated by rising back above $75 per barrel, due to pressuring its allies to halt Iranian imports.

Oil's rise, despite last week's deal by crude producers to raise output, helped Wall Street rebound on Tuesday, while also jumped as said he endorsed a measured approach to restricting Chinese investment in U.S. tech companies.

But that rally has fizzled. Equity futures indicate Wall Street will open weaker and MSCI's ex-Asian equity index fell 0.8 percent to a fresh two-year low. Losses were led by China, where Shenzen-listed blue chips sank 2.2 percent to stand a whisker above 13-month lows.

Chinese equities have now fallen into so-called bear market territory, having tumbled 20 percent from recent peaks.

The yuan slipped to a fresh six-month low against the dollar, as the central allowed the biggest one-day weakening in the currency in percentage terms since January 2017. Many analysts now see authorities allowing currency weakness in order to counter the hit to trade.

"After a lot of sabre-rattling, we are seeing suffering a lot more than Wall Street, so clearly the first round (of trade war) has been won by Unfortunately, that then overflows into emerging markets and Europe, so it's not a pretty time for investors," said Peter Lowman,

Lowman said a ten-year equity bullmarket had left many assets "priced for perfection", meaning setbacks could have an outsize impact, especially because central banks, led by the U.S. Federal Reserve, are tightening policy after years of ultra-low interest rates.

"Oil trading near $80 is going to put pressure on inflation around the world which means central policy may have to tighten quicker than expected," Lowman added.

The supply worries have overshadowed a supply increase agreed by OPEC and other oil producers last week, pushing Brent futures over $76 a barrel

European shares, meanwhile, fell 0.5 percent to the lowest since April 12. A near-one percent fall in auto shares, among the most vulnerable to U.S. tariffs, took German equities 0.5 percent down to nearly three-month lows.

Many investors still caution against reading too much into the fallout from the trade tensions, citing robust global growth and hopes of an ultimately pragmatic approach by leaders on the trade issue.

"We still have fundamental macro drivers. It's very much a push-pull between fundamentals mattering more versus political factors," Kristina Hooper, at Invesco, said.

Nevertheless, trade-sensitive assets including currencies continue to feel the heat -- the Australian dollar weakened towards one-year lows hit recently and the New Zealand dollar touched seven month lows to the U.S. dollar.

The greenback itself firmed modestly against a basket of currencies, recovering from 10-day lows, but it fell 0.3 percent against Japan's yen which is considered a safe-haven asset.

Safe-haven bonds also gained from the turmoil, with 10-year Treasury yields slipping 3.5 basis points to around 2.84 percent, a near-one month low.

Political concerns in are also worrying investors at the margin as a row over migration policy in Germany's coalition government rumbled on, raising concerns that the euro zone's biggest economy could be headed for snap elections.

That also contributed to pushing German yields lower, also edging towards one-month lows.

(Reporting by Rao; additional reporting by in London and Wayne Cole in Sydney; Editing by Toby Chopra)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, June 27 2018. 14:55 IST