World markets cautious as Covid-19 spreads in Europe
World stocks kick off the week on a cautious note as traders weigh risks of European lockdown restrictions and prospects of faster Fed tapering
22 November 2021 - 12:17
bySaikat Chatterjee
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London — World stocks kicked off the week on a cautious note on Monday after posting a second consecutive weekly drop, and the euro struggled as traders weighed the risks of European lockdown restrictions and prospects of a faster Federal Reserve taper.
Though Wall Street futures held comfortably in positive territory in early London trading, major European indexes opened in the red as markets seem to have suddenly woken up to Covid-19 risks.
“The problem in Europe is the spread of Covid-19 which means that more lockdowns and other health restrictions partly against the non-vaccinated should rapidly increase in the next two weeks,” said Sebastien Galy, a strategist at Societe Generale.
“That in turn should have a negative impact on some services and impact negatively growth, a scenario that had been ever more priced into the European equity market.”
Austria powered down public life on Monday as its fourth national Covid-19 lockdown began, the first in a western European country, with Germany warning it may follow suit.
Though equity analysts have kept their bullish European stock market recommendations for now, investors are closely watching sectors such as travel, hotels and banks for wider impact. The travel and leisure index was the top decliner in early trading.
MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 0.1%. An Asian gauge was down by a similar margin.
The euro slipped 0.3% to $1.1260, close to a 16-month low hit on Friday. The common currency has been the prime mover in markets over recent sessions as investors bet that Europe’s economy will lag the US recovery.
On the corporate front, shares in Telecom Italia jumped 30% after KKR made a $12bn approach to take the Italian phone group private. A telecom subindex gained by its biggest margin since March.
Safe-haven assets such as bonds, gold and the yen have also benefited from the recent cautious tone.
On Monday, the yield on benchmark 10-year US Treasuries was steady at 1.5600%, with the yield curve at its flattest level since the pandemic began as markets eyed nervously the prospects of a quicker unwinding of stimulus.
Fed vice-chairperson Richard Clarida said last week that quickening the pace of tapering might be worth discussing at December’s meeting. November meeting minutes are due Wednesday.
Safe-haven assets attracted demand. Gold found support at $1,845 an ounce. The yen hovered at 114.09 per dollar.
Bitcoin was under pressure after posting its worst week in two months last week and fell 3% to $57,000.
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
World markets cautious as Covid-19 spreads in Europe
World stocks kick off the week on a cautious note as traders weigh risks of European lockdown restrictions and prospects of faster Fed tapering
London — World stocks kicked off the week on a cautious note on Monday after posting a second consecutive weekly drop, and the euro struggled as traders weighed the risks of European lockdown restrictions and prospects of a faster Federal Reserve taper.
Though Wall Street futures held comfortably in positive territory in early London trading, major European indexes opened in the red as markets seem to have suddenly woken up to Covid-19 risks.
“The problem in Europe is the spread of Covid-19 which means that more lockdowns and other health restrictions partly against the non-vaccinated should rapidly increase in the next two weeks,” said Sebastien Galy, a strategist at Societe Generale.
“That in turn should have a negative impact on some services and impact negatively growth, a scenario that had been ever more priced into the European equity market.”
Austria powered down public life on Monday as its fourth national Covid-19 lockdown began, the first in a western European country, with Germany warning it may follow suit.
Though equity analysts have kept their bullish European stock market recommendations for now, investors are closely watching sectors such as travel, hotels and banks for wider impact. The travel and leisure index was the top decliner in early trading.
MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 0.1%. An Asian gauge was down by a similar margin.
The euro slipped 0.3% to $1.1260, close to a 16-month low hit on Friday. The common currency has been the prime mover in markets over recent sessions as investors bet that Europe’s economy will lag the US recovery.
On the corporate front, shares in Telecom Italia jumped 30% after KKR made a $12bn approach to take the Italian phone group private. A telecom subindex gained by its biggest margin since March.
Safe-haven assets such as bonds, gold and the yen have also benefited from the recent cautious tone.
On Monday, the yield on benchmark 10-year US Treasuries was steady at 1.5600%, with the yield curve at its flattest level since the pandemic began as markets eyed nervously the prospects of a quicker unwinding of stimulus.
Fed vice-chairperson Richard Clarida said last week that quickening the pace of tapering might be worth discussing at December’s meeting. November meeting minutes are due Wednesday.
Safe-haven assets attracted demand. Gold found support at $1,845 an ounce. The yen hovered at 114.09 per dollar.
Bitcoin was under pressure after posting its worst week in two months last week and fell 3% to $57,000.
Reuters
JSE firmer as markets digest rate hike
Europe’s Covid-19 curbs put a dampener on Asian stocks as oil and euro slip
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