Kuwait Times

Reflation trades fizzle

Gold loses shine

-

LONDON: Stocks flatlined and gold fell yesterday as investors continued to question the ‘reflation’ trades that had lifted markets since the election of US president Donald Trump in November, while sterling basked in the glow of a six-month high following Tuesday’s surprise news of a snap UK election. Safe-haven bonds dipped slightly but largely held onto most of their recent gains before presidenti­al elections in France and on escalating tensions between the United States and North Korea.

European stocks were flat in early trade, following the 0.6 percent fall in Asian equities outside Japan to a one-month low, while E-mini futures for the S&P 500 were all but flat too. Sterling was just off a six-month peak against the dollar above $1.28 having surged when British Prime Minister Theresa May called an early general election for June 8, seeking to strengthen her party’s majority ahead of Brexit negotiatio­ns.

“Sterling rallied across the board yesterday on the back of Prime Minister May’s announceme­nt of snap UK elections. The market interprete­d the move as an effort to strengthen the prime minister’s majority and reinforce a more unified stance for the upcoming negotiatio­ns with the EU,” Unicredit analysts said in a note yesterday. “Geopolitic­al tensions are providing strong support to US Treasuries ... (and) in the euro-zone Bunds are receiving support from the general decline in risk appetite and uncertaint­y related to the French presidenti­al election,” they added.

Germany’s DAX was unchanged at around the 12,000-point mark , and Britain’s FTSE 100 fell a further 0.2 percent following Tuesday’s 2.5 percent slide, its biggest fall since June last year. British stocks are vulnerable to a rising pound because more than two thirds of FTSE 100 company earnings are derived from operations overseas. The FTSE has now erased all its gains for the year. The pound was lording it at $1.2824 yesterday having shattered a month-old trading range with a jump of 2.2 percent overnight. It also cleared the 200-day moving average for the first time since June, putting the squeeze on a raft of speculativ­e short positions.

Wall St loses steam

Earlier in Asia Japan’s Nikkei closed a smidgen higher at 18,432 points, but Shanghai extended its recent retreat with a drop of 0.8 percent. The Chinese market has fallen for four straight sessions on concerns over tighter regulation­s. The dollar managed to recoup its broader losses in the Asian session, and was flat against a basket of currencies in early European trading. The euro stood at a three-week high of $1.0736. Against the yen, the dollar was up 0.4 percent at 108.80 having been as low as 108.39 earlier.

The dollar was undermined in part by an eroding interest rate advantage as U.S. bond yields dived to five-month lows. Yields on 10-year Treasury paper sank to 2.17 percent , a world away from the 2.629 peak seen in March. They were last up slightly on the day at 2.19 percent. A run of disappoint­ing US economic data and doubts that the Trump administra­tion will progress with tax cuts have quelled expectatio­ns of faster inflation and boosted fixedincom­e debt. That, in turn, has taken the steam out of Wall Street. The Dow fell 0.55 percent on Tuesday, while the S&P 500 lost 0.29 percent and the Nasdaq 0.12 percent.

Goldman Sachs lost 4.7 percent in the largest daily drop since June after its earnings missed expectatio­ns as trading revenue dropped. In commodity markets, profit taking nudged gold down 0.4 percent to $1,287.10 an ounce, and away from Monday’s peak of $1,295.42. Oil prices slipped as US crude stockpiles fell by less than expected and a US government report said shale oil output in May was likely to post the biggest monthly increase in more than two years. Brent crude was last little changed at $54.93 a barrel, while US crude was also steady at $52.42. —Reuters

 ??  ?? YANGON: A bicycle porter smokes a cigarette as he waits for customers at a wholesale vegetable market in Yangon yesterday. — AFP
YANGON: A bicycle porter smokes a cigarette as he waits for customers at a wholesale vegetable market in Yangon yesterday. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait