By Jamie McGeever
LONDON (Reuters) - Stocks flatlined on Wednesday as investors used the last day of May to protect gains built up in what has been yet another lucrative month, while sterling fell after an opinion poll suggested the ruling Conservatives could lose seats in next week's UK general election.
World stocks are poised to end May up nearly 2 percent, marking the seventh straight monthly increase and the longest monthly winning streak in over a decade.
MSCI's global equity index (MIWD00000PUS) held steady on Wednesday, while European stocks edged down 0.1 percent in early trade (FTEU3) (STOXX) following Wall Street's dip on Tuesday (SPX) (DJI).
Asian shares drew some support from data that showed activity in China's manufacturing sector grew at the same pace in May as in April, although a sturdy performance from the Japanese yen helped push the Nikkei into the red (N225).
The biggest mover in currencies was sterling, which shed 0.3 percent after a YouGov poll showed the ruling Conservative Party might lose 20 of the 330 seats it holds while the opposition Labour Party could gain nearly 30 seats.
"The return of U.S. and UK markets yesterday (after holidays) saw a little bit of weakness creep in as we head into month end and what has been a positive month for markets, with records broken on an almost daily basis," said Michael Hewson, chief markets analyst at CMC Markets.
"This soft tone looks set to be carried over this morning," he said.
The main pan-European indexes were slightly lower early on Wednesday, Germany's DAX (GDAXI) was flat and sterling's weakness helped lift Britain's FTSE 100 (FTSE) by 0.2 percent.
U.S. futures pointed to a rise of 0.1 percent on Wall Street (ESc1)
THE MONTH OF MAY
Activity in China's manufacturing sector grew at the same pace in May as in April, with a headline reading of 51.2, official data showed, in a reassuring sign the world's second-biggest economy is not losing too much steam after a solid first quarter performance.
Analysts had seen a slight slowing to 51.0.
European markets could take their cue later in the day from euro zone inflation data, which are expected to show a sharp slowdown to 1.5 percent in May from 1.9 percent April.
If confirmed, the European Central Bank may be less inclined to signal the start of the process of withdrawing its huge policy stimulus at its meeting next week, analysts said.
The euro was holding steady just under $1.12
The dollar was steady against the yen at 110.85 yen
Sterling fell as low as $1.2791
New constituency-by-constituency modelling by YouGov showed the ruling Conservative Party might lose 20 seats at the June 8 election while Labour could gain nearly 30 seats, potentially leading to a hung parliament, The Times said.
The news came after a string of opinion polls showed a narrowing lead for prime minister Theresa May's Conservatives, shaking investors' confidence that she would easily win a majority and strengthen her hand in the Brexit negotiations.
"We're getting very negative on sterling again," said George Saravelos, FX strategist at Deutsche Bank (DE:DBKGn).
"If May is unable to deliver a substantially increased majority, her flexibility to negotiate will not have improved. A strong Conservative majority is also only a necessary, not sufficient condition for a smooth Brexit," he said.
In commodities, oil prices remained soft, as concerns lingered about whether the extension of output cuts by OPEC and other producing countries will be enough to support prices.
U.S. crude futures (CLc1) fell 0.9 percent to $49.21 a barrel. Global benchmark Brent (LCOc1) was down 0.8 percent at $51.44 per barrel.
Gold <XAU=> was flat at $1,263 an ounce.