© Reuters. Men wearing protective face masks amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak look at an electronic board displaying Japan’s Nikkei Index outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan, September 24, 2021. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
By Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) – Investors sought to staunch the bleed on Wednesday after world stocks suffered their worst rout since January, while U.S. and European borrowing costs raced to their highest in months.
Asia managed to slow the falls and the pan-European STOXX 600 index bounced 1% in early trading after shedding 2.2% on Tuesday and after all three major Wall Street indexes suffered their steepest drops since mid-July. (N)
The global benchmarks for borrowing costs – the yields on U.S. and German government bonds – edged lower, with traders waiting to hear from the heads of the European Central Bank, the U.S. Federal Reserve, Bank of Japan and Bank of England later.
“The question that will come in the next 10 days is will the U.S. Treasury yield keep pushing above 1.5%,” said Societe Generale (OTC:SCGLY) strategist Kenneth Broux. “That was a sort of breaking point for broader risk assets when stops went off and the selloff started accelerating.”
Broux said the question for October and the rest of the year would be whether inflation pressures started to abate. “The 1.5% level (on U.S. Treasuries) is really pivotal,” he said.
In the currency markets, the run up in yields, prompted by signs the Fed wants to start cutting stimulus by the end of the year, saw the dollar touch an 18-month high against the yen and set its highest level of the year versus other major peers too.
Doubts are re-emerging about the global recovery at a time when the Fed is set to taper stimulus and the U.S. administration is stuck in debt ceiling talks that could lead to a government shutdown. China is also grappling with a power crunch that has hit its economic output.
MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 0.84% and was heading for a 9.4% decline for the third quarter, its worst quarterly performance since the first three months of 2020, when global markets were roiled by the initial spread of COVID-19.
World stocks are heading for their first red quarter since the peak of COVID panic, while the dollar is on course for its best year since 2015 and gas and energy prices have surged.
Coffee is up 25% for second quarter in a row. The Baltic Dry index of global freight prices has surged 40% to add to 50% and 65% rises in previous two quarters, while China’s woes have seen iron ore slump 45%, which will be its worst quarter on record.
“We still see inflation as a risk, but our base case is that it will be transitory and come back to more normal levels during next year,” said Osman Sattar, S&P Global (NYSE:SPGI)’s Director for EMEA Financial Institutions.
But companies face pressure on margins as higher energy prices are locked into next year’s bills.
ROTATE TO VALUE
U.S. Futures suggested a risk-friendlier mood could return on Wall Street. S&P 500 e-minis were up 0.6% and those for the Nasdaq were up 0.8% after that index had been pounded 3.6% on Tuesday by heavy tech stock selling. (N)
China’s worsening power crunch pushed investors out of Chinese stocks vulnerable to factory shutdowns, including chemicals and steelmaking, even as the country’s economic planning agency sought to reassure residents and businesses.
Debt saddled property giant China Evergrande’s shares leapt 15% though after it said it planned to sell a 9.99 billion yuan ($1.5 billion) stake in Shengjing Bank.
Investors are waiting to see whether the developer makes an overdue interest payment on a dollar bond and S&P said another major property firm, Fantasia, was also at risk of default.
Benchmark 10-year U.S. rates have gained 25 basis points in five sessions but inched down in Europe to 1.5097%, having topped 1.54% – the highest since mid-June – the day before.
“We think (10-year Treasury yields) are likely to around 1.5% to 1.75%, so they obviously still have room to go,” said Daniel Lam, senior cross-asset strategist at Standard Chartered (OTC:SCBFF).
Lam said the rise in yields was driven by the fact the United States looked set to start tapering its massive asset purchases by the end of this year.
Oil prices dropped having touched a near three-year high the day before. Brent crude fell 1.8% to $77.67 per barrel U.S. crude dipped 1.75% to $73.97 a barrel.
Gold edged higher with the spot price at $1,739.5 an ounce, up 0.4% from the seven-week low hit the day before as higher yields hurt demand for the non-interest bearing asset.
Source: Investing.com