Khaleej Times

Equities on longest slide since November as Fed caution hits

- Marc Jones

london — Shares were stuck on their worst run since November on Monday, as caution gripped traders in a week in which the Federal Reserve is likely to raise US interest rates and perhaps signal as many as three more hikes lie in store this year.

US stocks fell, with the Nasdaq dropping more than 1 per cent, as Facebook’s shares tumbled about 5 per cent on reports that data of 50 million users were misused.

The S&P technology index, which has powered the stock market’s near relentless rally, retreated 1.2 per cent.

The Federal Reserve’s policy meeting, over Tuesday and Wednesday, is also in focus as investors brace for a near-certain interest rate hike this week and watch out for clues on the path of rate hikes. A near 1 per cent drop for Europe’s main bourses amid a flurry of gloomy company news and weaker Wall Street futures meant MSCI’s main 47-country world stocks index was down for a fifth day running.

Japan’s Nikkei ended down almost 1 per cent in Asia too as its exporters were hit again by broadbased strength in the yen which was up for a third session in the last four in a lively currency market.

The dollar made ground on the euro, though, as bond traders saw the gap between 10-year German and US government yields, referred to as the ‘transatlan­tic spread’, ratchet out to its widest since December 2016.

Many analysts had been expecting that spread to narrow as the ECB neared the end of its stimulus this year but it hasn’t proved the case. The shorter-dated 2-year borrowing cost gap has been at its widest level in over 20 years in recent days. “There has been the narrative of supposed policy convergenc­e between the ECB and the Fed, but that is just not the reality,” said Saxo Bank’s head of FX strategy John Hardy.

With as many as four hikes seen this year, expectatio­ns were “chomping at the max” he added. “I think the euro ‘longs’ have good reason to be nervous,” he said referring to those betting on a higher euro.

Equities markets in the rest of Asia had also struggled overnight, though China did manage to eke

There has been the narrative of supposed policy convergenc­e between the ecB and the Fed, but that is just not the reality John Hardy, Head of FX strategy, Saxo Bank

out some gains as Beijing announced a new economic team. It included a surprise new central bank chief but for the most part was largely anticipate­d and is expected to keep the focus on halting riskier types of lending.

While Wall Street had bounced on Friday, the major indices still ended lower for the week. The Dow lost 1.57 per cent, the S&P 1.04 per cent and the Nasdaq 1.27 per cent. The decline was somewhat surprising given figures from Bank of America Merrill Lynch showed a record $43.3 billion of inflows into equities last week, outpacing bond flows for the first time since 2013. For the year so far, $9.8 billion has gone into tech stocks and $7.3 billion into financials, while $41 billion has flowed into emerging markets and $31 billion into Japan. Whether the cash continues to flow could depend on what the Fed decides on Wednesday. —

 ?? — Reuters ?? A near 1 per cent drop for Europe’s main bourses amid a flurry of gloomy company news and weaker Wall Street futures meant MSCI’s main world stocks index was down for a fifth day running.
— Reuters A near 1 per cent drop for Europe’s main bourses amid a flurry of gloomy company news and weaker Wall Street futures meant MSCI’s main world stocks index was down for a fifth day running.

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