Cape Times

EU stocks slip after German three-way coalition talks fail

- Abhinav Ramnarayan

EUROPEAN stocks slipped and safe haven government bonds were in demand early yesterday as the collapse of coalition talks in Germany served as a reminder of political risk that still runs as an undercurre­nt in Europe.

Chancellor Angela Merkel said yesterday that her efforts to form a three-way coalition government had failed, thrusting Germany into a political crisis and pushing Europe’s largest economy closer to a possible new election.

German stocks led the move downward, with the country’s main index down by more than 0.2 percent, pulling the main pan-European broader Euro Stoxx 600 index lower by a similar amount.

Investors instead preferred safe haven government bonds: the yield on Germany’s 10-year government bond, the benchmark for the bloc, edged lower to a 1½ week low of 0.35 percent at one stage.

“The collapse of the talks was a surprise and there is little clarity on how things will unfold. It adds to uncertaint­y, which is weighing on risk sentiment in world markets,” said Rainer Guntermann, rates strategist at Commerzban­k.

Other analysts said, however, that the overall sentiment towards the euro zone remains positive, reflected in the resilience of the euro yesterday.

“The eurozone political story is an outlier at the moment in the G10 currency trading space. The German political news over the weekend is not a game changer in our view,” said Viraj Patel, a currency strategist at ING in London.

“The broader story still remains of a recovering eurozone with improving fundamenta­ls.”

And so the euro, which had dipped to as low as $1.1722 at one stage, was back up on the day by 9am, resuming a more than 2 percent recovery against the dollar over the past two weeks.

Against the yen, the single currency dipped as much as 0.8 percent in Asian trading to a two-month low of 131.16 yen. But it was flat in London trade at 131.97 yen, down just 0.2 percent on the day.

In Asia, MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was off its session lows to be slightly down, as volatile Chinese shares reversed earlier sharp losses. Japan’s Nikkei stock average finished down 0.6 percent.

“It’s year-end season, so people have more incentive to take profits,” said Kyoya Okazawa, Hong Kong-based head of institutio­nal clients, Apac at BNP Paribas Securities. This after Wall Street had ended last week on a sour note with major indexes slipping as investors weighed the fate of the Republican­s’ tax overhaul plan.

The dollar edged lower against a basket of major currencies yesterday, and was close to one-month lows hit last week.

Crude oil futures were mixed. Brent crude oil LCOc1 dipped 19 cents, or 0.3 percent, to $62.51 (R872.45) a barrel, while US crude CLc1 added 9c, or 0.2 percent, to $56.64 a barrel.

Oil rebounded more than 2 percent on Friday after falling for five straight session as a major US crude pipeline was shut and traders anticipate­d an Opec deal to extend curbs on production.

But crude prices still fell for the first week in six, pressured by rising US output data. – Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? German Chancellor Angela Merkel gives a statement after the pre-talks on forming a new German government failed yesterday in Berlin.
PHOTO: AP German Chancellor Angela Merkel gives a statement after the pre-talks on forming a new German government failed yesterday in Berlin.

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