Khaleej Times

Stocks fall as US readies tariffs

- Ritvik Carvalho

london — World shares fell and were set to end the week in the red on Friday while the dollar climbed to a seven-month high, as investors braced for a list of Chinese goods targeted in a first round of announced tariffs by the United States.

The MSCI All Country World index, which tracks shares in 47 countries, was down 0.2 per cent in morning trade in Europe and set for a weekly loss.

US President Donald Trump has decided to impose “pretty significan­t” tariffs and will announce a list targeting $50 billion of Chinese goods on Friday, and a second wave of products worth $100 billion has been cued up. Beijing has warned that it was ready to respond.

It is not clear when Trump will activate the measures, but rising Sino-US trade tensions will put more pressure on China’s economy, which is starting to show signs of cooling after a multi-year crackdown on riskier lending.

Andrew Milligan, head of global strategy at Aberdeen Standard Investment­s, said that in the context of trade flows, the sum of goods targeted was small.

“The big question is do we fall into tit for tat? What’s the response going to be from China and the EU? Can it remain at a technical level or will we see a series of high-profile failing conversati­ons between Mr. Trump and other leaders?”

“That may not affect GDP growth all that much in the short term, but it will have a noticeable impact on cross-border capital flows and business sentiment,” Milligan said.

The Asia Pacific MSCI index exJapan edged down 0.3 per cent and was set for a weekly loss of more than one per cent. Many markets in Asia were closed on Friday for holidays celebratin­g the end of Ramadan.

Chinese stocks led the losses, with the benchmark Shanghai Composite index plumbing a 20-month low, as investors worried about the economic damage from the trade tensions with the United State.

Japan’s Nikkei average closed up 0.5 per cent and Australian shares ended 1.3 per cent higher.

European shares were set for their best week in more than three months as investors pushed back expectatio­ns for an interest rate increase after Thursday’s European Central Bank meeting.

The pan-European STOXX 600 index fell 0.2 per cent, up 2.2 per cent on the week, as a recovering euro weighed.

The euro was headed for its worst weekly loss in 19 months after the ECB signalled interest rates would be left at record lows into at least mid-2019. The common currency shed 1.9 per cent to the dollar, its biggest daily decline since Britain

voted to quit the EU in 2016.

The drop in the euro gave a lift to the dollar, which hit its highest against a basket of currencies since November 2017.

“I think the biggest concern at the moment, more than talk about trade, is the tightening of monetary conditions in emerging markets caused by a stronger dollar,” said Michael Hewson, chief markets analyst at CMC Markets in London, noting the Federal Reserve’s forecast for a total of four interest rates in 2018.

While the Federal Reserve and

the ECB provided much of the week’s central bank fireworks, the Bank of Japan produced no surprises at the end of a two-day policy meeting on Friday and looked set to continue its asset purchases for some time.

Boosted by the ECB’s announceme­nt and positive comments on the euro from politician­s in Rome, Italy’s government bonds were on course for best week since Mario’s Draghi’s “whatever it takes” outright monetary transactio­ns programme was created in September 2012.

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? Chinese stocks led the losses, with the Shanghai Composite index plumbing a 20-month low.
— Bloomberg Chinese stocks led the losses, with the Shanghai Composite index plumbing a 20-month low.

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