Stocks plunge as global growth, US earnings spook investors

Friday, 26 October 2018 00:01 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

Men walk past an electronic board showing Japan’s Nikkei average outside 

a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan, 25 October – Reuters

 

SYDNEY (Reuters): Asian shares plunged on Thursday as hundreds of billions of dollars hemorrhaged from global markets after a rout in tech stocks inflicted the largest daily decline on Wall Street since 2011, wiping out all its gains for the year.

Stock investors have become increasingly nervous about lofty equities valuations, a likely peak in corporate earnings momentum, faster rate hikes in the United States and an ongoing Sino-US trade war that threatens to hurt world growth.

Spreadbetters pointed to a subdued start for European markets with London’s FTSE index, Germany’s DAX and France’s CAC all set to open in the red. FTSE futures were last down 0.9%. E-Minis for the S&P500 ESC1 were flat after being up as much as 0.4% earlier in the day.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan skidded more than 2% and has now lost more than 18.5% of its value so far this year.

Japan’s Nikkei tumbled as much as 4% to a six-month trough while the Topix index plunged 3%, evaporating more than $155 billion in market value.

Chinese shares too were in the red with the blue-chip index .SSEC plummeting as much as 2.5% as fresh market-support measures by the Chinese government failed to ease worries about high leverage and the tariff war with the United States.

The index did pare some of its losses and was last down 1.2%.

 “If you’re a company and you’re in charge of a capex budget there is so much uncertainty about the next few years in terms of a trade war, in terms of Brexit,” said Jim McCafferty, Head of Equity Research, Asia ex-Japan at Nomura. “How, as a management team, will you decide how much capex to invest and where to invest it?”

Some companies, including industrial bellwether Caterpillar, have already warned about the impact on business from US import tariffs.

“Now that markets have some element of the confirmation that tariffs are bringing actual impact to US corporates, there may be a snowflake causing the avalanche scenario as just another factor of worry that now needs to be taken into consideration,” said James Stanley, market strategist at DailyFX.

He noted that those bearish on equities were better off focusing outside the United States, at least for now, with Europe one of the weaker links in global stock markets.

The return of the bears has already been more pronounced outside the United States, according to data analysed by Reuters. In addition, a Bank of America Merrill Lynch study recently found that 58 percent of the 2,767 stocks in MSCI’s global index are now in bear market territory.

Weak readings on manufacturing in Europe have added to angst over world growth, as has a surprise slump in US home sales, which suggested rising mortgage rates were sapping demand for housing.

Adding to the air of tension, police intercepted suspected bombs mailed to former US President Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and other high-profile Democrats, as well as to CNN, in what New York officials branded an act of terrorism.

The growing international pressure on Saudi Arabia over the death of journalist Jamal Khashoggi also weighed on investor sentiment.

On Wednesday, the Nasdaq .IXIC plunged 4.4% in its biggest one-day percentage decline since Aug. 18, 2011, vaporising $524 billion in market capitalisation.

The Dow fell 2.4% and the S&P 500 lost 3.09%.

Also weighing on sentiment, Citi lowered its global growth forecast for both 2019 and 2020 by 0.1 percentage point each to 3.2% and 3% , respectively, according to a note published Thursday.

In foreign exchange markets, funds flowed to the US dollar and Treasuries and out of the euro and the British pound.

The euro shed 0.7% to $1.1397 and breached a major chart bulwark at $1.1430. It was last up 0.1% at $1.1407.

Against a basket of currencies, the dollar eased from near a nine-week peak to 96.296.

Sterling hit a seven-week trough $1.2865, having dropped 0.8% overnight. It was last a shade higher at $1.2886.

The yen got the usual safe-haven bid, with the euro skidding to a two-month low at 127.68 yen. Even the high-flying dollar eased to 112.02 yen.

Oil prices slipped amid concerns over global growth. Brent crude fell 44 cents to $75.73 a barrel, while US crude dropped 45 cents to $66.37.

Spot gold was a tad firmer at $1,236.76 an ounce.

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