The Pak Banker

Shares slide, dollar up as hopes of recovery fade

- SHANGHAI -AFP

Global shares slid and the dollar rose on Thursday on investor concern about another economic hit from the coronaviru­s pandemic, ahead of German sentiment data and speeches from a clutch of central bankers.

After a summer lull in much of Europe, the infection rate has begun to rise sharply, with a number of countries including Britain introducin­g tougher rules to help limit the spread of the virus. The MSCI World index was down 0.6% at 0733 GMT, its fifth day in the red out of the last six and hovering near a two-month low. AsiaPacifi­c shares outside Japan fell 1.93%, chalking up their worst day in two months after economic warnings from U.S. Federal Reserve officials.

A broad gauge of Europe's top shares, the STOXX Europe 600, was down 1%.

Fed Vice Chair Richard Clarida and Cleveland Federal Reserve Bank President Loretta Mester both said the economy remained in a "deep hole", with Clarida calling for more stimulus. Yet political stalemate in Washington continues to frustrate efforts to prop up the world's biggest economy, beset by one of the worst COVID-19 death rates globally.

"A U.S. fiscal deal was baked into markets and now what you are seeing is that the probabilit­y of a deal going through has simply reversed," said Justin Onuekwusi, a Londonbase­d portfolio manager at Legal and General Investment Management.

"We have heard this week how important a fiscal deal is to the Federal Reserve but from a political standpoint, focus has moved more towards the election and Supreme Court deliberati­ons rather than the economy," he added. Flows into the dollar helped up it rise for a fourth straight day, leaving it on track to record its longest streak of daily gains since June and now nearly 3% off its August lows.

"Have we overpriced the rebound in the economy? After the stern warning from Clarida, I say we have," said Stephen Innes, chief global markets strategist at AXI. "I think the market was interpreti­ng a bounce from the bottom as a cyclical recovery, but I don't think we're there yet. I still think there's a lot of blood on the street, especially on Main Street."

Commoditie­s priced in dollars fell as a result, with Brent crude futures down 0.7% at $41.45 a barrel and gold down 0.2% - on course for a fourth day of losses that total nearly 7%.The euro was flat at $1.1658. "A stronger USD remains a significan­t headwind for commodity markets, with investor appetite waning," ANZ analysts said in a note.

With central bankers in focus globally, the chair of the U.S. Federal Reserve will be closely watched later in the day when he and a number of colleagues speak at the Senate Banking Committee. Elsewhere Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey is also due to speak, as is the European Central Bank's chief economist, Philip Lane, ahead of the release of its latest Economic Bulletin.

In emerging markets, both the Turkish and Mexican central banks are set to decide on monetary policy. MSCI's Emerging Markets Index was down 1.8% at 0814 GMT. Investors are waiting for weekly data due later on Thursday, which is expected to show U.S. jobless claims fell slightly but remained elevated, indicating the world's largest economy is far from recovering.

In Europe, the German Ifo business climate indicator for September is set to give a fresh read on Europe's biggest economy, while French business confidence for September is also out. Rate decisions are also due in Switzerlan­d and Norway, while the ECB is also set to carry out its latest Targeted Longer-term Refinancin­g Operation.

The company plans to sell 10.75 million shares in the IPO at a target range of $19 to $21 per share, according to a filing bit.ly/32PCRYQ. It had earlier expected it to be priced between $17 and $19 per share. Bentley expects to raise up to $225.7 million from the IPO. A host of companies have filed for U.S. initial public offerings this year during one of the busiest IPO periods in recent history, as businesses rush to take advantage of ample investor appetite for new stocks. Bentley, which was founded in 1984, develops, manufactur­es and sells software solutions for infrastruc­ture operations. Goldman Sachs & Co, BofA Securities and RBC Capital Markets are among the underwrite­rs for the IPO.

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