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World stocks sapped by coronavirus surge, recession gloom

Published 25/06/2020, 01:03
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A man wearing protective face mask walks in front of a stock quotation board outside a brokerage in Tokyo

By Marc Jones

LONDON (Reuters) - World stocks spluttered to their lowest level in more than a week on Thursday, as a surge in U.S. coronavirus cases and an IMF warning of an almost 5% plunge in the global economy this year hit the bulls again.

Asia suffered its biggest drop in eight sessions overnight (MIAPJ0000PUS) and though Europe's STOXX 600 (STOXX) recovered from an early 1% fall it remained unsteady, while Wall Street was expected to open 0.5% in the red.

After a white-hot few months for markets that has seen world stocks rebound nearly 40% (MIWD00000PUS), nervousness about the impact of COVID-19 was rising again.

In the United States, Florida, Oklahoma and South Carolina reported record increases in new cases on Wednesday and Australia posted its biggest daily rise in two months.

The governors of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut ordered travellers from eight other states to quarantine on arrival, a worry for investors who had mostly been expecting an end to pandemic restrictions.

Disney (N:DIS) has delayed the re-opening of theme parks and resorts in California, and Texas is facing a "massive outbreak" and considering new localised restrictions, its governor said.

"During the swift rebound since the March lows, equity markets may have gotten a little ahead of themselves," wealth manager DWS said in a quarterly Chief Investment Officer report.

With the added pressure of looming half year portfolio reviews, investors were huddling in traditionally safer government bonds and gold.

The International Monetary Fund said on Wednesday it now expects global output to shrink 4.9% this year rather than the 3% it predicted in April.

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"There is a little bit of reality bites coming," said Damian Rooney, senior institutional salesman at stockbroker Argonaut in Perth. "I don't think there was a particular straw that broke the camel's back, but people are a little bit twitchy."

UBS' chief economist Paul Donovan said, however, that international organisations tend to lag behind and many economists were now revising forecasts up, not down.

"The IMF has been too pessimistic on growth in 27 of the past 30 years. It tends to be significantly too pessimistic when there are big structural changes."

For now the subdued mood helped the dollar build on broad gains in the FX markets which had lifted it from near a two-week low.

Yields on benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasuries (US10YT=RR) and German Bunds sank to 10-day lows of 0.66% and -0.47% although they remained within their well-worn recent ranges.

LAYOFFS

Weekly jobless claims data showed weak demand is forcing U.S. employers to lay off workers, even as businesses reopen. Claims totalled a seasonally adjusted 1.480 million for the week ended June 20 and although down from 1.540 million the prior week, it was higher than the 1.3 million a Reuters poll had expected.

Bank of England chief economist Andy Haldane, who argued against last week's increase to the bank's bond-buying programme, is due to speak about the future of society at 1700 GMT. The pound was up for a third day in four before that.

Signals on the trade front and political uncertainty have also added to jitters.

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The United States has added items valued at $3.1 billion to a list of European goods eligible to be hit with import duties.

The Trump administration has meanwhile determined that China's Huawei and video surveillance company Hikvision (SZ:002415) are owned or controlled by the Chinese military, laying the groundwork for sanctions and new Sino-U.S. tension.

That stalled a rally in riskier currencies, and pushed the Australian dollar

Gold

Latest comments

Came here looking for market direction and bumped into a load of virologists. However, 3 critical markers are - hospital admissions, critical care capacity and deaths. It's difficult to gauge new infections vs increase in testing, so there may be a naturally higher amount of cases in communities anyway. It's also true that this may mutate into a milder virus, they often do, and if that happens increased cases won't translate into the 3 said markers.
people think it's over....its not
Indexes revive so fast. Virus, unemployments are not in the limelights
Wearing mask and social distancing are the keys to survive these disasterous times. Goverments around the world need to do a course correction and people should be more responsible in dealing with their personal protection. Market will find the balance but a course correction is required now!
It's not 100% preventable on the Method...the virus is still the virus....
The ones that are going to miss out, are the ones that don’t understand the virus numbers. The death rate is falling, 98% of cases is like having cold and some say they feel fine. Virus is getting weak.
Yes there's no way we can know the true numbers. If we look at this sars-cov2 then if appears to be very similar to sars genetically. The one deciding factor is that it's not my as severe in symptoms as sars so there are more people who do not have serious problems or are asymptomatic. This is ideal for spreading. When we do more research we may find that China has had a much bigger percentage of population who have had it.Same in the West there is already evidence of sars-cov2 genetic remnants from November.
youvalso forget about that part of the population who dont ha e any symphtoms orcreally mild and never been tested. The death ratio is missleading but in both ways... what is half of the population is already got it but only 10% has serious enough symphtoms to get tested and x% of those end up dead...You wont know the true number and the seriousness of the disease untill you have some knowledge what percent of the population is uneffected by the virus...
you cannot die from Covid 19 if you don't catch it. therefore the number to watch is the number of new infections...not the number of deaths. deaths follow infections and always lags infections. but governments publicise the number of deaths because it's a good number for them
Virus case numbers don’t mean nothing, it’s the death rate you need to look at.
If we knew the total infected population numbers it may be likely that the death rate is around 1 to 2 percent.
Nobody really knows, we live in a world of risk aversion and react to things without considering the consequences. Here in the UK we seeded the virus into care homes and probably put it one place it could do most damage by clearing elderly out of hospitals to make space. The effect of us changing one thing not realising another problem has been created.
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