The Borneo Post

Global stocks slump despite drop in bond yields

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Stocks slumped worldwide despite a drop in bond yields, as rattled investors did not step in to pick up bargains.

NEW YORK: Stocks slumped worldwide despite a drop in bond yields, as rattled investors did not step in to pick up bargains.

The dollar rose against its main rivals in anticipati­on of the US Congress later Friday voting later Friday on President Joe Biden’s enormous US$1.9-trillion economic rescue package.

Oil prices fell after striking 13month peaks Thursday on keen demand.

Vaccine rollouts, slowing Covid19 infection rates, and Biden’s stimulus package have sent stocks up in recent weeks. But that good news is proving to be a doubleedge­d sword for traders as they weigh the much-needed return to pre-pandemic life against the prospect that prices could rise, possibly sharply.

There is a worry that surging inflation could threaten one of the key pillars of the rally on world markets from their March nadir: record-low borrowing costs.

Alarm bells have been ringing for weeks as the yield on benchmark 10-year US Treasuries climbed to one-year highs earlier this week as investors moved out of the safe haven of government bonds.

Yields on government debt also have advanced around the world, from New Zealand and Australia to France, Germany and Japan.

Equity markets in Europe and Asia picked up the negative momentum from Thursday’s bruising session on Wall Street.

Asia suffered one of its worst sessions since the dark days of last March’s collapse. Losses then rolled over into Europe and onto Wall Street despite bond yields falling back and a muted US inflation reading for January.

Only the Nasdaq bucked the trend, finishing Friday’s session up 0.6 per cent. Even with that gain, the tech-rich US index dropped about five per cent for the week.

Market analyst Chris Beauchamp at trading platform IG said “it is clear that very few investors are willing to step up and buy the dip, at least for the time being.”

He noted that shares in mining, oil and financial companies which have climbed in recent weeks have borne the brunt of the selling

“This is the most serious move to the downside in months” except for a swoon in the market in midJanuary, Beauchamp said. Uncertaint­y reigns CMC Markets UK analyst Michael Hewson said “while bond yields have retreated from their highs for the week, there is still a fair degree of uncertaint­y about their overall future direction, in light of the rapid speed of the moves seen in the past week or so.”

The global sell-off came despite reassuranc­es from Federal Reserve chief Jerome Powell this week that US interest rates will not rise for the foreseeabl­e future.

“Investors are clearly spooked despite the best efforts of Jerome Powell,” Craig Erlam, market analyst at Oanda trading group, told AFP.

Oxford Economics said markets were “misreading the Fed’s reaction function.”

“While inflation will undoubtedl­y warm up in 2021, it’s unlikely to spiral out of control amid a lingering demand gap in some sectors of the economy and anchored inflation expectatio­ns,” Oxford Economics said in an analysis.

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