Tag Archives: Stocks

Economic worry and G20 caution reign for world stocks

LONDON (Reuters) – Worries about the fragility of global economic recovery hit financial markets again on Friday, knocking world stocks down for the fourth session in a row ahead of a summit of Group of 20 nations.

Currency traders also sold higher-yielding currencies.

Investors have pulled back a bit from riskier assets this week as evidence built that economic growth, particularly in the United States, may be slowing.

This has combined with fears that the spending cuts and tax rises being promulgated by European governments to cut debt will hurt the recovery.

G8 leaders meeting on Friday in Canada — turning into the G20 on Saturday — are set to grapple with this issue with Washington warning against cutting too far and too fast.

“The cohesion generally evident among policymakers in dealing with the global crisis is in danger of giving way to a more divisive debate about how to manage the recovery,” Credit Agricole analysts said in a morning note to clients.

MSCI’s all-country world index .MIWD00000PUS was down 0.2 percent, heading for a 2.7 percent weekly loss.

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Asia stocks fall as yuan euphoria fades

HONG KONG (Reuters) – Asian stocks retreated on Tuesday as investors booked profits a day after China’s weekend decision to give its currency more flexibility triggered a risk rally.

China

China’s move on the yuan had set off optimism that a stronger yuan would lift its purchasing power for foreign goods such as commodities, a boon to the global economy given the nation’s vast appetite for raw materials.

But that euphoria was checked as investors took a more considered view on the impact the move would have on economic fundamentals.

“The potential boost that might be given to consumption is likely to be subtracted from what will happen to exports,” said Emil Wolter, head of regional strategy at Royal Bank of Scotland.

“But the bottom line is that the market is making a huge deal of an insubstantial occurrence,” he said, adding that the yuan move had triggered a rally because it came after stocks registered their worst May in 12 years and at a time when there were large short positions.

“Sell in May and go away” is an old stock market adage which refers to the seasonal weakness in shares.

Beijing set the mid-point for the yuan’s daily trading range at a 5-year high on Tuesday, which gave the markets a brief respite from the selling but kept most indexes in the red.

On Tuesday, the MSCI index of Asia Pacific ex-Japan stocks was down 0.7 percent, hovering around the day’s lows.

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