Wall St. rallies but markets still gripped by China fears
NEW YORK (AFP) – US shares rallied strongly Wednesday after a top Federal Reserve official hinted the bank would not raise interest rates, but there was little sign that the global financial turbulence rooted in China's market meltdown was over.
Even another rate cut by the People's Bank of China did not stem worries that slowdown in the world's secondlargest economy could stall world growth.
Widespread concerns remained over whether authorities in Beijing were doing enough to calm the markets and sustain economic activity at the current level, despite the injection of hundreds of billions of yuan into markets to support stocks and the currency itself.
''If problems in China's financial markets and real economy deepen, and the authorities fail to contain the situation, a full-blown financial and economic crash in China could ensue,'' said Christophe Donay, chief strategist at Pictet Wealth Management.
''This is currently the biggest risk for the global economy and financial markets.''
The day saw mixed movements in major bourses – Shanghai fell another 1.27 percent and European shares, represented by the Eurostoxx 50 blue chip index, lost 1.47 percent while Tokyo added 3.2 percent.
But Wall Street broke free of a six-day losing streak.
Helped by a 5.7 percent gain from Apple, the S&P 500 closed with a 3.90 percent gain; the Dow added 3.95 percent, and the Nasdaq Composite was up a heady 4.24 percent.
Even with the US gains, S&P-Dow Jones Indices said $3.45 trillion in value had been wiped from shares around the world over seven days in the Chinadriven rout.
Fed, ECB vigilant The US rebound came after William Dudley, the head of the New York branch of the Fed and one of the most influential members of its monetary policy board, said the reasons for moving to a longawaited rate hike in September had weakened.
''The slowdown in China could lead... to a slower global growth rate and less demand for the US economy,'' Dudley said.
''We're concerned about the outlook, how is the economy going to perform in the future... And there, international developments and financial market developments do have relevance because they can impinge and affect the economic outlook.''
While Dudley's comments do not preclude the US central bank from embarking on its first rate increase in nine years in the coming meeting – he stressed that the world's largest economy remained in good shape – analysts saw it as a sign that the Fed would weigh the global turbulence in making the decision.
Analysts also pointed to comments by European Central Bank executive board member Peter Praet on Wednesday that the ECB was prepared to expand its quantitative easing stimulus program if China's slowdown further dampens inflation.