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Global stocks choppy as trade war fears take hold

By AFP - Aug 15,2019 - Last updated at Aug 15,2019

Traders work after the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange, on Thursday, at Wall Street in New York City (AFP photo)

LONDON — Stock markets nervously traded sideways on Thursday as investors all but gave up hope that a US-China trade war could be nearing its end.

Fears over the stand-off between the world's two biggest economies added to jitters over the state of the world economy which had inflicted heavy losses on equities on Wednesday, including the worst one-day fall this year on Wall Street's Dow.

"Every time investors find the strength to pick themselves up off the floor, the trade war delivers another blow and knocks them down again," said Craig Erlam at Oanda.

"This morning that came in the form of reports that China is threatening retaliation against Trump's tariffs that are due to come into force on 1 September."

 

'Huge shake down' 

 

The yield on the 10-year US Treasury bond slid on Wednesday below the yield on the two-year note, an "inversion" that has been a reliable harbinger of recession for decades.

"The slew of negative news has seen a huge shake down in global equity markets, and money has poured into government bonds," noted David Madden, analyst at CMC Markets UK.

European stocks gave up an early attempt at a rebound, while US stocks managed to claw back a tiny part of Wednesday's heavy losses at the New York opening bell, having plunged around 800 points, or 3.1 per cent, the previous day.

"US stocks have overcome early choppiness and are higher in early action, modestly trimming yesterday's plunge that came amid heightened global recession concerns," Charles Schwab analysts said. 

 

'More sinister' 

 

The trade war has hammered global demand, with data this week showing China's industrial output had struck a 17-year low, while investment and retail sales have also slowed in the world's second biggest economy.

"US-China trade tensions have metastasised into something more sinister by affecting global growth to such a large degree that bond markets are pricing-in a high probability of a worldwide recession," warned Stephen Innes, managing partner at VM Markets.

Weeks of pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong have added to the uncertainty, with Beijing referring to increasingly violent demonstrations as "terrorism", stoking fears of a Chinese crackdown.

Economists have warned for months that trade tensions threatened investment and dampened global sentiment, which was already suffering owing to China's economic slowdown and fears over Brexit's impact on Britain and Europe, where the German economy is showing signs of contraction.

The pound climbed against the dollar and euro as data showed British retail sales rose unexpectedly by 0.2 per cent in July.

"The UK's retail data surprised the investors by posting an upbeat reading and traders pushed the [pound] currency higher," said Naeem Aslam, chief market analyst at Think Markets.

He warned, however, that "there is no light at the end of the Brexit tunnel" so far.

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