U.S. bond yields near seven-year high stymie world stocks' recovery

Reuters  |  LONDON 

By Sujata Rao

The effects on world markets of this week's selloff that took 10-year yields to seven-year highs were exacerbated by economic growth concerns stemming from trade conflicts and $80-per-barrel oil, as the cut its world GDP forecasts for the first time in two years.

The IMF's estimates for the and were both reduced, with the fund predicting the countries would feel the brunt of their trade war next year. It also slashed 2019 forecasts for emerging markets.

MSCI's world equity index which has spent four days in the red, was flat. While most Asian markets rose, European shares slipped 0.2 percent as the technology and luxury sectors were hit by tech weakness and fears of a Chinese economic slowdown.

Wall Street futures indicated a flat opening for the S&P500, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq was tipped to fall.

"We are seeing more investors opting to wait and see how risks surrounding rising yields, global growth and play out", Jasper Lawler of said.

"Near-term risks to global financial stability have increased rapidly over the past few months. The markets have been relatively complacent, but we are starting to see an acknowledgement of these risks."

In China, the yuan slipped against the dollar for the fifth session out of the past six to approach four-year lows hit in August .

The focus is on next week's semi-annual U.S. report on currencies which, many reckon, could accuse of manipulating the yuan depreciation.

MARKETS

Stocks have been rocked this week by a heavy selloff on U.S. Treasuries where 10-year borrowing costs hit a 7-1/2-year peak of 3.261 percent. Yields stand off those levels but rose 2 basis points on the day to 3.23 percent.

"We are at some sort of critical moment, a crossroads, for bond and equity markets," said Marie Owens Thomsen, at

U.S. 10-year yields at 2 percent unequivocally favour equity investment but this is not the case above 3 percent, she said.

"This January we took out the 2 percent (yield) handle and now we are wondering if we are permanently taking out the 3 percent handle as well. That makes the climate for equities much more challenging."

Owens Thomsen warned though that deceleration in economic growth could curb the rise in yields. The Treasury selloff may have paused also after complained the Federal Reserve was going too fast with rate hikes.

In Europe, there has been more bellicose rhetoric from Italian politicians, many of whom appear to be girding for battle with authorities after unveiling a bigger-than-expected budget deficit.

However, Italian stocks rose 0.3 percent after Minister said he expected "collaboration" with the EU. He had pledged on Tuesday to restore calm if market turbulence escalated into financial crisis.

His comments also took Italian bond yields further off multi-year highs, with 10-year borrowing costs down six bps.

Shares in Italian banks, volatile because of the lenders' government bond holdings, also got a boost after an EU told Italian banks' there was no cause for alarm about Italian banks' liquidity levels .

"At the current junction I don't think (Italy) are anywhere near a position where they can provoke another crisis in Europe," Owens Thomsen said.

Politics were in focus in Britain too, where reports of progress in negotiating a Brexit deal with the EU pushed the pound to 3-1/2-month highs versus the dollar.. The dollar was flat against a basket of currencies, easing from seven-week peaks.

The IMF growth forecast cuts pulled prices off 4-1/2-year highs above $85, though they were supported by Hurricane Michael which has shut nearly 40 percent of crude output in the

(Additional reporting by in Tokyo,)

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First Published: Wed, October 10 2018. 17:15 IST