Scottish Daily Mail

Global stocks tumble on second wave virus fears

- by Francesca Washtell

STOCK markets around the world tumbled as mounting concerns over a prolonged economic downturn rattled investors.

Share prices tanked as figures showed more than 36m Americans have claimed unemployme­nt benefits in the past eight weeks.

The market slump came as Spain’s coronaviru­s death toll rose to its highest in a week – prompting fears of second wave of infections. And it followed a stark warning from the World Health Organizati­on’s emergencie­s chief, Michael Ryan, that the coronaviru­s ‘may never go away’.

The FTSE 100 fell 2.8pc, or 162.51 points, to 5741.54, while the

FTSE 250 shed 3pc, or 473.53 points, to 15404.59, as the global Covid-19 death toll edged closer to 300,000.

In Europe, Germany’s Dax fell 2pc and France’s Cac by 1.7pc.

Traders also fretted about relations between the US and China after Donald Trump said he was very disappoint­ed with Beijing over its failure to contain coronaviru­s, adding that the worldwide pandemic cast a pall over his trade deal.

Wobbles on the stock market have sent investors fleeing into Government bonds, seen as a safe haven in times of uncertaint­y.

The yield – or how much interest they pay relative to their price – has slipped into negative territory for UK bonds, meaning investors are so keen to buy them they are effectivel­y paying to own the debt instead of getting a return.

Some of the biggest fallers on the Footsie were housebuild­ing stocks, including Berkeley (down 5.7pc, or 235p, to 3915p) and Persimmon (down 4.7pc, or 102p, to 2049p), as surveys suggested it could take 11 months for house prices to recover to pre-lockdown levels. Oil giants also tracked lower, with BP down 1.7pc, or 5.2p, to 296.45p and Shell falling 5.3pc, or 65p, to 1158.4p.

The Internatio­nal Energy Agency estimates oil demand will fall by a record 8.6m barrels a day, or around 9pc of pre-lockdown demand, for the whole year.

The price of Brent crude oil was up 3pc to $30 a barrel last night.

Shares in embattled travel companies also traded lower, with cruise operator Carnival shedding 0.9pc, or 7.8p, to 830.4p and budget airline Easyjet falling 0.9pc, or 4.5p, to 484p.

But British Airways-owner IAG slid 3.2pc, or 5.5p, to 168.2p after chief executive Willie Walsh said the Government was seriously damaging the chances of a recovery for the industry.

IAG also revealed British Airways has provided cash refunds on a staggering 921,000 tickets, is still processing 47,400 and has given customers vouchers instead of a refund on 346,000 further bookings. Miners Glencore and

Anglo American were dragged lower by the economic malaise, but also fell after Norway’s £820bn sovereign wealth fund excluded them – and a slew of other commoditie­s groups – from its portfolio because they produce coal.

Glencore shares fell 1.4pc, or 1.96p, to 136.5p. Anglo American fell 1pc, or 13.4p, to 1364.2p. Revenues dropped 15pc at Wincanton in April, as an early lockdown surge in grocery deliveries tapered off at the same time as other sectors for which it trucks good around stalled.

The update drove its shares down 12.7pc, or 29p, to 199p.

Mid-cap food group Greencore also chugged lower, falling 14.3pc, or 24.1p, to 144.1p after analysts at Jefferies downgraded it from ‘buy’ to ‘hold’.

Brokers believe the firm, which makes takeaway food such as sushi, wraps and microwave meals for grocers, will struggle for longer than they previously thought after sandwich sales through supermarke­ts fell by 60pc – double the 30pc drop forecast.

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