GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks succumb to growth fears; ECB trillion euro question awaits

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 02 Oktober 2014 | 18.12

Thu Oct 2, 2014 6:47am EDT

  * Global PMIs dent risk appetite      * Europe stocks drop as global sell-off continues      * Tokyo stocks hit hard, safe-haven yen, gold benefit      * Spotlight on Draghi as ECB meets        By Marc Jones      LONDON, Oct 2 (Reuters) - World stocks and oil were knocked  hard on Thursday after global manufacturing data and an Ebola  health scare in the United States spooked markets, sending  investors scurrying to the safety of U.S. bonds, the yen and  gold.      European markets had been sucked into the storm, anxious  about the European Central Bank's monthly meeting where it is  under pressure to launch an aggressive government bond purchase  programme to revive the euro zone's stodgy recovery.         Investors flocked to the yen and safe-haven bonds following  a slew of surveys on Wednesday that had shown German factory  activity shrinking for the first time in 15 months, China's  manufacturing sector barely growing and the United States  slowing more than expected.       Confirmation of a case of Ebola in the United States joined  a growing list of bearish news stories, with geo-political  tensions in Ukraine, the Middle East and Hong Kong, and growth  concerns around China and the euro zone sapping risk appetite.      All that pushed MSCI's 45-country world stock index   to a five-month low as a fourth day of  back-to-back falls left it down more than 5 percent in the last  month.      There was little sign of the rout coming to end in Europe  either. Britain's FTSE, Germany's DAX and  France's CAX saw 0.3-0.6 percent falls while Italy   and Portugal were down more than 1 percent.      "The market is quite nervous," said Alvin Tan, a strategist  at Societe Generale in London.       "What we are most concerned by is the risk backdrop. The S&P  500 appears to be in the process of breaking below the 100-day  moving average and on top of that we see volatility picking up  in not only equities but also currencies."      On top of all the geopolitical and growth concerns, markets  are also struggling with the fact the Federal Reserve is about  to end years of pumping billions of dollars of stimulus into the  U.S. and global economy each month.      After Wall Street had dropped 1 percent Japanese  equities had led the selloff in Asia overnight. A rebound in the  yen after a sudden loss of altitude for the high-flying  dollar pushed Tokyo's Nikkei down a sharp 2.1 percent to  three-week lows.                    TRILLION EURO QUESTION          Markets in both China and Hong Kong had been closed for  public holidays but sustained civil unrest in Hong Kong is also   weighing on investor confidence, although the city's streets  were calm for most of Thursday.       The risk-averse global mood had pushed 10-year U.S. Treasury  yields -- the benchmark for world debt markets --  into their biggest drop in just over a year on Wednesday. They  were steady at 2.4 percent in European trading as German Bunds   sat not far from all-time lows at 0.9 percent.         The dollar subsequently slipped back below 110 yen - a   threshold breached for the first time since 2008 this week. It  was last down 0.3 percent at 108.61 yen and on course for  its biggest drop in over a month against major currencies.      The euro was a shade higher at $1.2638 having crawled  away from a two-year low of $1.2571 hit earlier in the week.      Traders were focused on the European Central Bank meeting  later in the session with the divergence in U.S. monetary policy  from those of Europe and Japan now an established market theme.      ECB head Mario Draghi is set to give details at the bank's  1230 GMT post-meeting news conference of a new plan to buy  asset-backed securities and covered bonds, hoping this will  finally revive the euro zone economy.       It hopes the plans will add a trillion euros to its balance  sheet, but poor demand for a new round of cheap loans last month  is raising the pressure for it too be more aggressive.      "In the longer term people are still hoping for full-scale  quantitative easing," said Robert Kuenzel, euro area economist  at Daiwa Securities in London.      "But it is unlikely to come in the near future. I think the  first line of defence is the TLTRO (cheap long-term loans to  banks) and the covered bond and ABS purchase programmes, but  there is a risk that both of those components disappoint."            OIL PLUNGE      With the focus on damage limitation, gold added to small  gains to rise 0.5 percent to $1,219.27 an ounce.       In commodities though, Brent crude oil tumbled below  $92 a barrel, extending a three-month losing stretch as weak  economic signals from China and Europe and ample global supply  continue to weigh.       It has now lost 20 percent since June and sharp cuts in  official selling prices from Saudi state producer Saudi Aramco  on Wednesday gave the clearest sign yet that the world's largest  exporter is trying to compete for crude market share.      "This is a structural change in the oil market, with Saudi  Arabia explicitly stating that they are willing to compete on  price," said Bjarne Schieldrop, chief commodities analyst at SEB  in Oslo.      "I think Brent will fall below $88 before we see the bottom  of the market."        (Reporting by Marc Jones; Editing by Ruth Pitchford)  
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