Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Europe struggles after Chinese stocks slide

By Jamie McGeever

LONDON (Reuters) – A 6 percent fall in Chinese shares on Tuesday hit Asian stocks and left European equities struggling for gains while emerging market currencies and oil prices touched multi-year lows.
A broad measure of Asian stocks fell to its lowest in two years and U.S. stock futures pointed to a lower open on Wall Street <SPc1>.

“The late rout in Chinese stocks appears to have knocked sentiment in Europe this morning. The commodity sell-off is also weighing on sentiment today,” said Craig Erlam, senior market analyst at Oanda in London.
Britain’s FTSE 100 fell 0.3 percent <.FTSE>. The pan-European FTSEurofirst index of 300 leading shares eked out gains of 0.2 percent <.FTEU3>, having been in negative territory much of the morning. Germany’s <.GDAXI> fell 0.1 percent and France’s CAC 40 <.FCHI> was down a quarter of a percent.

Earlier, China’s main Shanghai Composite and Shenzhen 300 indices both lost 6.2 percent <.SSEC> <.CSI300> as investors bet that demand in China will cool further.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan <.MIAPJ0000PUS> fell 1 percent to its lowest since August 2013. Japan’s Nikkei <.N225> dipped 0.3 percent.

Thai shares <.SET> hit a 1-1/2-year low and the baht a six-year low after a bomb blast in Bangkok on Monday killed 19 people, including three foreign tourists.

The worries over China came on a day when trade in the yuan was relatively calm after Beijing fixed the currency’s exchange rate marginally higher for the third successive session.

China’s central bank on Tuesday set the yuan’s midpoint <CNY=SAEC> near Monday’s closing price at 6.3966 per dollar. In the spot market, the yuan closed flat at 6.3938 <CNY=CFXS>.

Emerging market currencies were weak across the board. In Turkey, where Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu was set to give up trying to form a government, the lira hit a record low <TRY=>, and the South African rand slid to a 14-year low <ZAR=> against a firm dollar.

“The weakness of sentiment in emerging market FX is striking,” Societe Generale currency strategists said in a note to clients on Tuesday.

“Fear of a resumption of significant capital outflows if the Fed does raise rates next month as well as fear of further yuan weakness and concern about the sluggish pace of global growth are all delivering persistent broad-based weakness.”

MSCI’s main index of emerging market shares <.MSCIEF> fell 0.8 percent.

In developed markets, the euro slipped 0.2 percent to $ 1.1060 <EUR=> and the yen was flat at 124.30 yen <JPY=>.

The British pound hit a seven-week high above $ 1.57 <GBP=> after UK inflation came in higher than forecast.

Investors will look to U.S. inflation data and minutes of the latest Federal Reserve monetary policy meeting, both being issued on Wednesday, as they ponder when the Fed will begin raising interest rates.
Markets are still not fully convinced the Fed will raise rates in September, but most investors are betting a rate hike will occur by the end of year. The yield on U.S. 10-year Treasuries was 1 basis point higher at 2.16 percent <US10YT=RR>.

Commodity prices remained under pressure from worries about growth slowing in China. Brent oil futures <LCOc1> fell 0.2 percent to $ 48.64 per barrel, edging closer to a six-month intraday low of $ 48.24 touched last week.

U.S. crude futures fell 0.4 percent to $ 41.79 <CLc1>, having hit a 6-1/2-year low on Friday.
Copper futures <CMCU3> touched a fresh six-year low at $ 5,012 a tonne before recovering to $ 5,030, down 1.7 percent.

(Additional reporting by Shinichi Saoshiro and Lisa Twaronite in Tokyo and Nigel Stephenson in London; Editing by Kevin Liffey)
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