The Pak Banker

World shares edge higher after tech rout, oil slides

- SYDNEY -AFP

World shares rose slightly on Monday after losing $2.3 trillion in the last two sessions in a technology stocks led rout as investors reassessed soaring valuations when the global economy is in a coronaviru­sinduced recession while oil prices dropped.

European stocks, which have fewer technology stocks compared to the United States, started the week in the black driven by a 1.2% gain in Germany's Dax and London's exportheav­y FTSE 100

UK stocks, meanwhile, were helped by a falling pound with Brexit talks plunging into crisis following Britain's threat to override its EU divorce deal. Sterling fell around half a percent against the dollar and euro on Monday.

"It is almost inevitable that the perceived probabilit­y of ' no deal' will escalate over the coming weeks," Goldman Sachs analysts wrote in a note. Markets activity was likely to remain subdued on Monday with the U.S. closed for the

Labour Day holiday.

But the snap Wall Street crash late last week looked far from over with E-Mini futures for the S&P 500 slipping 0.5% and Nasdaq futures down 1.3%.The exclusion of Tesla from a group of companies that were being added to the S&P 500 weighed on the electric car maker's Frankfurt-listed shares, which were last down 3%.

World shares were up 0.2%. They had hit a record high last week as central bank stimulus drove asset valuations to heady levels, but the rally has since cooled as tech stocks sold off while worries over patchy economic recovery dogged investors. Sharp sell- offs have recovered quickly in recent months though analysts expect further downside to this leg due to rising cross-asset volatility.

"Our risk indices have begun to turn from their euphoria highs," Jefferies said, adding that it was switching its weighting on MSCI All World index to "tactically bearish" in the short term. "On the balance of probabilit­ies, last week's correction has further room to go." In Asia, China's bluechip index slipped 2.3% on Monday as possible blacklisti­ng of China's largest chip maker, Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Internatio­nal Corp (SMIC), hit tech firms across the board.

The mood across Asian markets was tentative. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was last down 0.2% after two straight days of losses toppled it from a 21/2-year peak last week.

Data earlier on Monday showed Chinese imports fell 2.1% in August from a year earlier, confoundin­g expectatio­ns for a 0.1% increase, in a sign of sluggish domestic demand.

Exports jumped by a larger-than-expected 9.5%.Japan's Nikkei fell 0.5% with SoftBank coming under heavy selling following media reports it has spent at least $4 billion buying call options on listed U.S. technology stocks.

In currency markets, the dollar steadied in holidaythi­nned trade on Monday, while traders shifted their focus to the European Central Bank's meeting on Thursday.

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