World stocks slide as US-China deal seen as not likely in 2019

London — Stocks slid further on Thursday as the stand-off between the world’s two largest economies expanded beyond trade, reducing the odds of a phase-one deal in 2019 and forcing investors to shed risky assets.

Investors had widely hoped for a US-China trade deal by mid-November but the absence of one, and Washington’s bill to support protesters in Hong Kong, has brought progress grinding to a halt.

With US President Donald Trump seen as likely to sign the bill, Deutsche Bank strategist Jim Reid said this “could risk [make] progress towards a phase-one trade deal”.

European shares nevertheless bounced back from day lows in late morning trade as fresh reports emerged that China has invited top US trade negotiators for a new round of face-to-face talks in Beijing.

The trade-sensitive German blue-chip index was down 0.2%, recovering from a 0.7% fall, after the Wall Street Journal reported Beijing hopes the round of talks can take place before next Thursday’s Thanksgiving holiday in the US.

US S&P 500 futures were marginally down, having dropped as much as 0.6% in Asian trade. The S&P 500 had hit a record high as recently as Tuesday on trade deal hopes, but Washington’s move on Hong Kong derailed the rally.

“The cracks in equity-market sentiment widened a little further yesterday, although this setback remains modest in the context of the index gains enjoyed so far in quarter four,” said Ian Williams, economics and strategy research analyst at Peel Hunt.

Trade experts and people close to the White House said completion of a phase-one US-China trade deal could slide into 2020, as Beijing presses for more extensive tariff rollbacks and the Trump administration counters with demands of its own.

Chinese vice-premier Liu He, also the chief trade negotiator, said he was “cautiously optimistic” about a phase-one deal, according to a report by Bloomberg.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares excluding Japan fell 1.1% to a near three-week lows, with Hong Kong’s Hang Seng tumbling 1.6% while Japan’s Nikkei dropped 0.5%. Chinese mainland shares dropped 0.3%.

Investors who had sought the safety of government bonds, the yen and gold in early trade shifted back from those positions after China reportedly invited US negotiators for talks.

“Our short-term strategy remains fairly cautious, as markets are very narrowly driven — every positive piece of news in trade negotiations sends markets higher, while any disappointment sinks,” said Marija Veitmane, senior strategist at State Street Global Markets. “This makes it very hard for investors to build positions in risk trades.”

Spot gold reversed gains to trade 0.2% lower at $1,468.91 an ounce as of 11.27am GMT.

German government bond yields — which move inversely to price — bounced back from two-week lows, while the 10-year US treasuries yield rose to 1.7551%, off three-week lows touched earlier in the day.

The Chinese yuan, meanwhile, cut some losses after hitting three-week lows, and was last trading at 7.0210 to the dollar in onshore trade. The yen, which rallied almost 1% from more than five-month lows, was flat against the dollar.

The euro gained slightly and was last trading at $1.1083 ahead of the release of minutes of the European Central Bank’s (ECB) most recent policy meeting.

Oil prices dipped, paring some of the 2% gains made on Wednesday after a better-than-expected US crude inventories report and as Russia said it would continue its co-operation with Opec to keep the market balanced.

Global benchmark Brent futures dropped 0.4% to $62.08. US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures were down 0.4% at $56.73 per barrel in early Thursday trade.

Reuters

Source: businesslive.co.za