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SYDNEY/HONG KONG (Reuters): Asian stock markets slumped to fresh four-year lows on Wednesday as a relentless slide in oil prices snuffed out an attempted rally on Wall Street and dealt a further blow to global investors’ appetite for riskier assets.
European stocks were expected to fall sharply at the open on Wednesday with financial spreadbetters predicting Britain’s FTSE 100 to open down 2%, Germany’s DAX to fall 2.4% and France’s CAC to slip 2.2-2.4%. U.S. crude wallowed at its lowest since 2003 after the world’s energy watchdog warned the market could “drown in oversupply”. US futures CLc1 shed nearly 3% to $27.68 while Brent crude LCOc1 lost 2% to $28.21 a barrel.
In Asia, stocks surrendered all of Tuesday’s rare gains with the MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan falling 2.6% on the day and hitting its lowest since October 2011.
“Sentiment seems to be to be extremely negative in the commodities at the moment,” said Assad Tannous, head trader at Asenna Wealth Solutions in Sydney.
Leading regional stocks lower was the Hong Kong stock market .HSI with the benchmark index falling 3.7% on the day, its single biggest daily fall since early August, with all of its 50 constituents in the red.
Japan’s Nikkei closed down 3.7%, leaving it 20% below last year’s peak, meeting the technical definition of a bear market. The pain was felt widely with Australian stocks down 1.3% and South Korea off 2.3%.
Chinese markets fared only marginally better than regional counterparts amid mounting talk that more stimulus may be on the way, possibly before the Lunar New Year holidays in early February.
December factory output, investment and retail sales data released on Tuesday were all weaker than expected. The CSI300 index fell 1.3%, after rallying more than 3% on Tuesday. The Shanghai Composite Index .SSEC eased 0.9%.
The government-backed China Securities Journal reported that Beijing had the policy space for further easing to support the economy, including raising deficit spending to around 3% of annual economic output. China’s central bank late Tuesday revealed it would inject more than 600 billion yuan ($91.22 billion) into the banking system to help ease a liquidity squeeze expected before the long Lunar New Year celebrations.
Yet such a move is usual before the holidays, and stopped well short of an actual cut in bank reserve ratios.
Wall Street had seen its early gains erased by the slump in U.S. crude. The Dow ended Tuesday up 0.17%, while the S&P 500 rose a single point and the Nasdaq eased 0.26%. US stock futures were down 1.5% indicating a weak start.
The S&P energy sector alone dived 2.17%. Oil at 12-year lows stokes fears of deeper losses for energy companies and the risk some may fail to pay their debts.
Tom Porcelli, chief US economist at RBC Capital Markets, noted that polls showed investors were more bearish on Wall Street than at any time since mid-1987.
“Perhaps characterizing the recent bout of negativity as being ‘pervasive’ is an understatement,” he wrote in a note.
Yet history showed that sentiment was darkest before the dawn.
“When investor pessimism reached these levels outside of an economic recession, the market was higher one quarter hence in every single instance, and up by an average of 6.4%.”
With risk out of favour, sovereign bonds were in demand. Yields on US 10-year Treasuries declined to 2.02% and were down a massive 25 basis points since the new year began.
Other safe havens included the Japanese yen, which rose across the board. The dollar was dragged back to 116.93 yen from a top of 118.11 on Tuesday, while sterling hit its lowest since early 2014.
The pound had already been under fire after Bank of England Governor Mark Carney said he had no “set timetable” for raising rates, sending it to a seven-year low of $1.4127.
Against a basket of currencies, the US dollar was down at 98.814, while the euro edged up to $1.0938.