Regina Leader-Post

MICHAEL MSIKA and NAMITHA JAGADEESH Euro stocks see worst week since March COVID-19 panic

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European equities posted their worst weekly decline since the March turmoil amid concerns about a new wave of coronaviru­s cases and slow economic recovery.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index closed up just 0.3 per cent on Friday, erasing earlier gains of as much as 1.6 per cent. This brought the weekly retreat to 5.7 per cent, the worst since March 13.

Cyclical and value shares, such as travel, automakers and banks, led the drop this week as investors partially unwound the rotation trade that has fuelled the rally since mid-may on the optimism of increased stimulus measures and the relaxation of lockdowns. But after the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund said the global economy is recovering more slowly than expected and concerns rose about a second wave of U.S. infections, investors rushed out of risk assets.

“There’s a massive dislocatio­n that’s going on between financial assets and what’s going on in the real economy,” said Suzanne Hutchins, a portfolio manager on the real return team at Newton Investment Management Ltd. “Right now the market is pausing for breath, it’s gotten ahead of itself in the short-term, but there are a lot of people in the market that are underinves­ted ... that are chasing this rally. So the chase has been on ... now we’re seeing a pause.”

Hutchins said the stock market could trade sideways or fall “a bit,” but it won’t revisit the lows seen in mid-march. The Stoxx 600 had rallied more than 30 per cent from March lows before falling this week.

Bank of America Corp. strategist Sebastian Raedler remains upbeat about cyclicals and value stocks, counting on easing lockdowns to lead to pickup in the economic activity.

The strategist sees 20-per-cent upside for the Stoxx 600 to 420 by November, according to a note to clients on Friday.

“While consolidat­ion might not be over and fundamenta­l upside looks limited at current levels, we believe further dips should be bought into,” Barclays Plc strategist Emmanuel Cau wrote in a note on Friday. The “big picture” hasn’t changed and the ample liquidity should continue to act as a backstop to equities, he added.

Friday saw a tentative resumption of the rotation into cyclicals and value shares that had reversed earlier this week. Carmakers, miners and real estate rose one per cent or more.

Although value stocks may get another boost in the coming months from recovering economic activity, they are unlikely to stage a more durable outperform­ance without a strong reflationa­ry rebound, according to Seema Shah, chief strategist at Principal Global Investors.

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