Stocks and oil prices fell on Tuesday, while the euro approached parity with the US dollar, as markets were gripped by fears of a global recession.
The European Stoxx 600 share index lost 0.6 per cent, taking it about 15 per cent lower for this year. A broad MSCI index of Asian equities touched a fresh two-year low. Futures markets signalled Wall Street’s S&P 500 would fall 0.7 per cent in early New York trades.
Meanwhile, the euro was on the cusp of hitting $1 for the first time since 2002. The dollar index, which measures the US currency against six others and has a large euro weighting, rose 0.4 per cent to remain at its strongest for two decades.
Brent crude, the oil benchmark, dropped 4.8 per cent to just over $102 a barrel.
Investors have been spooked by business and consumer surveys that indicate a looming US slowdown, with the central bank’s ability to support markets stymied by rampant inflation. Data to be released on Wednesday are expected to show it hit a fresh four-decade high of 8.8 per cent last month.
“The 1970s show it is perfectly possible to have a recession and still-uncomfortably high inflation,” said Nicholas Colas, co-founder of DataTrek Research. “The way the economic data is developing this year, we seem to be in a similar situation for now.”
Recession fears are even more intense in Europe, where governments are gripped by worries about Moscow cutting off gas supplies, exacerbating an energy shock and cost of living crisis.
Analysts expect the US Federal Reserve to raise interest rates by as much as 0.75 percentage points at its July meeting, from a current range of 1.5 per cent to 1.75 per cent. Futures markets point to a benchmark US interest rate of just under 3.5 per cent for early 2023. By comparison, the European Central Bank is forecast to tighten monetary policy more slowly.
The FTSE All-World index of developed and emerging market shares has fallen more than 20 per cent this year as higher interest rates raise borrowing costs and drag down stock market valuations. Investors now see an economic slowdown hitting corporate earnings.
“We see the bear market in two phases. The first part is interest rate driven and the second part is earnings driven,” said Trevor Greetham, head of multi-asset at Royal London Asset Management. “There will be a recession and that will cause a lot of weakness in earnings that’s yet to start.”
The consensus of analysts’ forecasts suggests companies listed on the S&P 500 index will report 4.3 per cent year-on-year earnings growth for the second quarter of this year, according to FactSet.
“The current weaker economic momentum combined with the rise in costs will produce more concern in CEOs’ announcements in relation to pricing power and corporate margins,” said Michele Morganti, senior equity strategist at Generali Investments.
Government bonds, which had rallied on Monday, continued to firm as traders sought out the assets traditionally seen as havens.
The yield on the 10-year US Treasury note, which moves inversely to its price and underpins debt costs worldwide, fell 0.08 percentage points to 2.92 per cent. The two-year Treasury yield fell 0.07 percentage points to 3 per cent, trading above the 10-year in a so-called inverted yield curve pattern that has historically predicted recessions.
Futures linked to TTF, the European wholesale gas price, were 1.4 per cent higher at €171.5 per megawatt-hour, remaining more than double their level of early June.
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