Cape Times

Greenback’s third decline in four sessions

Europe’s main share markets land in the red

- Marc Jones

THE THREAT of a global trade war and a steady message from the Federal Reserve on US interest rates pushed the dollar to its lowest in over a month yesterday and took Europe’s main share markets into the red.

It was the dollar’s third decline in four sessions and helped Britain’s pound to a six-week high before a Bank of England meeting expected to lay the foundation­s for another UK rate increase in coming months.

The Fed raised its key rate by 25 basis points to 1.75 percent on Wednesday and flagged at least two more increases were likely this year. But it stopped short of pointing to the three that some economists had been predicting.

China also nudged up its borrowing costs overnight, as Beijing braced for new tariffs from US President Donald Trump on Chinese imports worth as much as $60 billion (R715.2bn).

Not all Fed bulls were discourage­d, though. “Over the balance of the year we do think they will move to four hikes,” said JP Morgan Asset Management’s Seamus Mac Gorain, highlighti­ng the impact of recent fiscal stimulus.

“Trade tariffs are a risk, of course, but more open economies,” such as Mexico or the euro zone “could be more at risk than the US.”

Those jitters, plus weaker-than-expected German business confidence data, caused European shares to fall 0.7 percent to a two-week low.

In the currency market, the British pound reached $1.4171, its highest in more than a month. British wage data published on Wednesday bolstered expectatio­ns that the Bank of England would signal a May rate increase after its monetary policy meeting yesterday.

Bond yields – which move inversely to price – fell broadly. Borrowing costs on 30-year German debt hit their lowest level of the year.

Two-year US yields slipped to 2.304 percent from 9½-year high of 2.366 percent. The 10year yield fell below 2.85 percent, its biggest move in three weeks.

Protection­ism

“The threat of protection­ism is dampening the mood in the German economy,” said Clemens Fuest, the chief of the Munich-based Ifo institute, which published the business sentiment data.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan ended almost flat. A 1 percent drop in Chinese and Hong Kong stocks offset gains elsewhere.

Japan’s Nikkei rose 1 percent as investors went bargain hunting after a difficult run for the market.

China hopes it can hold talks with the US to achieve a “win-win” solution on trade, Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Hua Chunying said in Beijing.

But worries were swirling of a more traditiona­l kind of war. A widely read Chinese state-run newspaper said yesterday that the country should prepare for military action over Taiwan.

Beijing was infuriated after Donald Trump signed legislatio­n last week that encourages the US to send senior officials to Taiwan to meet Taiwanese counterpar­ts and vice versa.

Concern about a trade war between the world’s two largest economies also put commodity markets on guard.

Oil prices gave up earlier gains to leave Brent crude futures at $69.34 per barrel and US crude at $65.13 a barrel.

Copper steadied at $6 817 (R81 260) per ton after reaching a three-month low on Wednesday.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Containers at the Yangshan Deep Water Port in Shanghai, China. China nudged up its borrowing costs overnight, as Beijing braced for new tariffs from the US.
PHOTO: REUTERS Containers at the Yangshan Deep Water Port in Shanghai, China. China nudged up its borrowing costs overnight, as Beijing braced for new tariffs from the US.

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