World shares set for worst week in three months on US-China trade war

London — World shares rose on Friday but were set to end a second week lower amid intensifying worries over the fallout of a trade dispute resulting from US tariffs, while oil prices were higher ahead of an oil cartel Opec meeting later in the day.

The MSCI All-Country World index, which tracks stocks in 47 countries, was up 0.2% in the European morning but down 1.3% on the week, its worst weekly showing since mid-March.

Investor anxiety over a possible full-blown trade war has deepened this week over increasingly sharp rhetoric between the US and China, and growing evidence of the economic damage such a conflict could produce.

German car maker Daimler cut its earnings forecast earlier this week, saying tariffs on cars exported from the US to China would hurt Mercedes-Benz sales.

India joined the EU and China in retaliating against US President Donald Trump’s tariffs on steel and aluminium, raising import duties on US almonds by 20%. US commerce secretary Wilbur Ross said on Thursday that the US needed to make it harder for its trading partners to have high trade barriers to achieve Trump’s ultimate goal of lower tariffs and a level playing field.

Chinese state media said on Friday that US protectionism was self-defeating and a “symptom of paranoid delusions” that must not distract China from its path to modernisation.

“With no negotiations in sight at the moment, our base case [scenario] is shifting to a further escalation of the trade conflict between the two countries,” wrote analysts at Danske Bank in a note to clients. There is a risk of a further deterioration in relations on June 30, when Washington is due to announce a plan to restrict Chinese investments into the US and limit exports of US tech products to China, they added.

Strong financial stocks and better-than-expected eurozone purchasing managers index (PMI) for services helped drive a timid relief bounce in European shares. The pan-European STOXX 600 and its eurozone counterpart were set for their biggest weekly loss in three months as the consequences of rising protectionism sank in, notably for the automotive sector.

The strong PMIs also boosted the euro. It was last up 0.5% on the day and was set to end the week up by the same amount. Against a basket of currencies, the dollar was 0.2% lower.

Against the yen, the dollar was little changed. It was modestly higher at ¥110.14, below a one-week high of ¥110.76 scaled the previous day amid lingering concerns over the US-China trade dispute.

“The potential for all-out trade war, European political risks and emerging-market volatility remain potent factors that should contain dollar/yen within the current range, though the lack of downside over the past week or so suggests stronger underlying demand,” wrote Robert Rennie, head of market strategy at Westpac.

The European PMIs also showed manufacturing growth was the weakest in 18 months on trade worries. Elsewhere in Europe, Greece’s borrowing costs fell to four-week lows on Friday after Athens won debt relief from the eurozone.

Sterling was 0.5% higher against the dollar on Friday, extending gains made the previous day after the Bank of England’s chief economist Andy Haldane unexpectedly joined the minority of policy makers calling for a UK interest rate hike, citing concerns about growing wage pressure.

Oil prices rose on uncertainty ahead of a meeting Opec and other major producers including Russia starting in Vienna later in the day. Saudi Arabia and Russia are in favour of raising output. Other Opec-members, including Iran, have opposed this, resulting in a flurry of backdoor diplomacy ahead of the meeting.

Brent crude traded at $74.00 a barrel, up 1.3%. US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude rose 1.1% to $66.27 a barrel.

Earlier in Asia, MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan dropped as much as 0.35% at one point to touch its weakest since early December, before erasing losses to be up 0.15%. Still, it was 2.3% off for the week.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng plumbed six-month lows, having lost 3.9% so far this week. South Korea’s Kospi hit nine-month lows and in mainland China, the CSI300 index lost almost 5% this week to one-year lows. Japan’s Nikkei gave up 0.8% for a weekly loss of 1.7%.

Reuters

Source: businesslive.co.za