Growth fears grip world markets ahead of Fed meeting

Reuters  |  LONDON 

By Dhara Ranasinghe

Investor confidence has deteriorated further with more fund managers expecting global growth to weaken over the next 12 months, the worst outlook in a decade, of America Merrill Lynch's December investor survey showed.

U.S. stock futures pointed to a firm open for day after U.S. stocks fell to their lowest levels in more than a year, while European equity markets recovered some ground.

Still the overall tone remained downbeat, with many investors questioning whether the will be able to raise rates much further in the face of turbulent markets and a weakening

MSCI's world stock index has fallen 10 percent this year and is set for its worst year in a decade.

The S&P 500, a broad measure of U.S. stock markets, is almost 8 percent lower in December - heading for its worst month since 2010.

"We're facing the biggest in U.S. stocks since 1931 and this is striking and worrying at the same time," said Chris Bailey, European strategist at international firm "We are at a regime shift moment and the debate is how big that regime shift will be."

A speech by Chinese which investors had hoped could lift morale meanwhile had little impact, with Chinese shares falling over 1 percent. Japan's Nikkei lost 1.8 percent.

In addition, the German Ifo economic institute's business climate index fell for the fourth month in a row to its lowest level in more than two years and revised down its economic growth forecasts.

On Monday, U.S. and his top stepped up their criticism of the central bank's monetary tightening, raising investor anxiety.

OIL PRICES, DOLLAR FALL

dropped 4 percent, weakening for a third consecutive session as reports of swelling inventories and forecasts of record U.S. and Russian output.

U.S. dropped $2.04, or 4.1 percent, to a low of $47.84, its weakest since September 2017, before recovering to around $48.53 by 1150 GMT.

Brent crude lost $2.41, or 4.0 percent, to a 14-month low of $57.20.

The dollar extended its falls against major currencies ahead of the Fed meeting. The euro was up 0.4 percent at $1.13935, having recovered all of its losses from Monday when it was hit by weak euro zone data.

The dollar was also weaker against Japan's currency, trading down 0.5 percent at 112.26 yen.

The U.S. dollar replaced known as FAANGs in the - Facebook, Apple, Amazon, and - and China's BATs - Baidu, and - as the most crowded trade for the first time since January, of America Merrill Lynch's December investor survey showed.

"This year has been quite remarkable in the sense that pretty much all asset classes have been down, which is even worse than 2008 because during the GFC (global financial crisis) we at least saw some safe havens - bonds, gold - performing positively," said Stefan Keller, at in

"At least in real terms, that's not the case today. This is indeed a huge challenge. Clearly it's in sharp contrast to last year's optimistic outlook."

Safe-haven U.S. and German markets appeared to be the beneficiaries of the risk-off mood in world markets for now.

Germany's 10-year yield fell to a one-week low of 0.23 percent, while 10-year yields fell to their lowest since August at 2.82 percent.

(Reporting by with additional reporting by Helen Reid; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

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

First Published: Tue, December 18 2018. 21:38 IST