The Sun (Malaysia)

European stocks steady after Asian fall

> Investors remain in gloomy mood after several days of market turbulence

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LONDON: Europe’s stock markets steadied yesterday after Asian counterpar­ts began the week strongly lower, with investors remaining in a gloomy mood after several days of market turbulence sparked by trade rows and a spat over the US central bank.

European shares struggled for direction as traders wrestled with a cornucopia of risks, including higher oil prices from Saudi Arabia tensions – and ongoing turmoil surroundin­g Brexit that briefly weighed on sterling.

“The pound is holding up surprising­ly well this morning, recovering a little after gapping lower over the weekend as hopes of a Brexit deal in principle this week have diminished significan­tly,” said David Cheetham, chief market analyst at XTB traders.

“The FTSE 100 is little changed near the 7,000 (points) level as stocks around the globe look to consolidat­e and lick their wounds after last week’s large scale selling.”

Trading in Frankfurt was meanwhile delayed by more than an hour yesterday owing to a technical hitch.

Gold reached a three-month high at US$1,230 (RM5,113) an ounce, with the precious metal profiting from its haven investment status.

Saudi stocks made a partial comeback after days of heavy losses in economic fallout linked to political tensions over the disappeara­nce of prominent journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

In Asia, Japanese equities led the way lower, with the benchmark Nikkei 225 shedding almost 2%, in anticipati­on of an announceme­nt from Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of a two percentage-point hike in the sales tax.

Japanese stocks faced pressure also after US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said over the weekend that Washington wants to include a provision to prevent currency manipulati­on in future trade deals with Tokyo.

Chinese stocks, which were the worst hit in last week’s global rout, also tracked lower, with the benchmark Shanghai composite off 1.5%.

“We can’t say the shock is over,” said Masayuki Kubota, chief strategist at Rakuten Securities.

Last week saw a broad-based sell-off in global equities, prompted by fears of higher US interest rates, continued worries over US-China trade and attacks by President Donald Trump on the Federal Reserve, which he called “crazy”.

On Friday, the bulls attempted a fightback but found it hard going in another seesaw session. Early European gains fizzled and the Dow Jones closed up 1.2% following late buying but it also dipped into the red for part of the session.

This week, traders are expected to focus also on a raft of economic data and dozens of company results. – AFP

 ??  ?? Pedestrian­s stand in front of an electronic indicator showing share prices of the Tokyo Stock Exchange in Tokyo yesterday. The benchmark Nikkei index dropped more than 1.8%.
Pedestrian­s stand in front of an electronic indicator showing share prices of the Tokyo Stock Exchange in Tokyo yesterday. The benchmark Nikkei index dropped more than 1.8%.
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