Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Risk rally fades as stocks, oil slip back into the red - from TRUNEWS

The recent recovery in riskier assets fizzled out on Tuesday, with a fall in stocks, oil and the value of China’s yuan currency boosting investor demand for safer assets such as the Japanese yen, government bonds and gold.

Oil fell more than 2 percent and the main European stock indices fell as much as 1 percent, giving back some of their recent gains: oil rose more than 5 percent on Monday and world stocks recorded their biggest rise last week since early October.

Sterling recovered from its seven-year low against the dollar struck on Monday but struggled to make much headway as uncertainty over Britain’s membership of the European Union continued to swirl ahead of the June 23 referendum.

“Yesterday, higher oil prices, surging commodity stocks and bounce in banking shares prompted an extension of the rally that began on February 12,” said Jasper Lawler, analyst at CMC Markets in London.

“Today though, European markets look to pull back from those gains, alongside a dip in oil as China stocks fall and mining giant BHP Billiton slashes its dividend.”

The world’s biggest miner announced a $5.67 billion net loss in the six months to the end of December, its first loss in 16 years, and said it would slash its interim dividend by 75 percent.

Its shares were down 4 percent (BLT.L) in London, helping to pull the FTSE 100 down 0.9 percent .FTSE. Among the biggest losers was Standard Chartered, whose shares were down 5 percent after the emerging market-exposed bank reported an 84 percent fall in annual profit.

Germany’s DAX was last down 0.6 percent .GDAXI, France’s CAC 40 was 0.3 percent lower .FCHI and Europe’s index of leading 300 shares was down 0.2 percent at 1303 points .FTEU3.

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Earlier in Asia shares retreated from a seven-week high as the oil price rally that had boosted global equity markets reversed. MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS fell 0.3 percent and Japan’s Nikkei .N225 erased morning gains to close down 0.4 percent.

Pump jacks are seen at the Lukoil company owned Imilorskoye oil field outside the West Siberian city of Kogalym, Russia, January 25, 2016. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin

Pump jacks are seen at the Lukoil company owned Imilorskoye oil field outside the West Siberian city of Kogalym, Russia, January 25, 2016. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin

Chinese stocks .SSEC closed 0.9 percent lower, their biggest fall in three weeks, while U.S. futures pointed to a fall of around 0.2 percent on Wall Street ESc1.

Oil markets jumped as much as 7 percent on Monday – and had rallied around 30 percent from their lows a month ago – as speculation about falling U.S. shale output fed the notion that crude prices may be bottoming after their 20-month collapse.

But they retreated on Tuesday on concern that any cuts to U.S. production may be countered by rising output from Iran.

U.S. crude futures CLc1 fell 2.2 percent to $32.66 a barrel and the international benchmark Brent LCOc1 slid 2.1 percent back below $34 a barrel.

In currency markets the British pound GBP=D4 remained vulnerable a day after falling nearly 2 percent, its biggest one-day drop in almost six years, on worries Britain may leave the European Union.

The pound hit a seven-year low of $1.4057 on Monday, after London Mayor Boris Johnson, one of the country’s most popular ruling party politicians, announced his support for Britain to leave the EU in June’s referendum.

Sterling last stood at $1.4113, down slightly on the day.

“The 30-year low is $1.373 seen in June 2001, so the whole ‘Brexit’ discussion is pushing us against what has been a well held level at around $1.40 that sterling has bounced off several times over the last three decades,” said Jim Reid, market strategist at Deutsche Bank.

The euro EUR= also fell to $1.10035 on Monday, its lowest in almost three weeks, on fears Brexit could undermine the European project. It recovered to $1.1033 on Tuesday.

Investors’ shift towards safer ground on Tuesday pushed the dollar lower against the yen, down almost 1 percent on the day back below 112 yen JPY=.

The dollar’s index against a basket of six major currencies .DXY hit a three-week high of 97.60 on Monday but slipped back to 97.28 on Tuesday. This retreat helped lift gold 0.6 percent to $1,215 an ounce XAU=.

The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield was down slightly at 1.75 percent US10YT=RR.

The post Risk rally fades as stocks, oil slip back into the red appeared first on TRUNEWS with Rick Wiles.



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