World stocks retreated on Wednesday, June 13, from one-month highs, with investor focus turning from the U.S.-North Korea summit to an expected U.S. interest rate rise and the risk of a fresh outbreak of trade tensions between China and the United States.
Trade frictions between the United States and China pushed non-Japan Asian equities half a percent lower and took MSCI’s all-country share index 0.2 percent lower.
Global tech stocks approached record highs and Italian yields fell, although markets remain under pressure from U.S. plans for extra tariffs on $50 billion worth of Chinese goods . The Mexican peso and European auto stocks, also vulnerable to trade-war risk, slipped further.
Equity markets are “marking time and finding it difficult to make upward progress despite reasonably good economic data”, said Andrew Milligan, head of global strategy at Aberdeen Standard Investments.
“We are entering three days of important central bank decisions. Markets have pretty much priced what (the banks) will do and it is clear we are in a monetary policy tightening cycle,” Milligan said.
The U.S. Federal Reserve is expected to announce a 25-basis-point rate increase, this year’s second. The European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan also meet this week.
Tuesday’s meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has soothed some geo-political fears, as a joint statement pledged to work toward the “denuclearization” of the Korean Peninsula.
That, alongside a buoyant picture on company earnings and M&A deals, helped Wall Street close on a strong note on Tuesday, with tech stocks hitting record highs
European equities opened flat to lower. An index of auto stocks, also at risk of additional U.S. tariffs, fell 0.25 percent.
Milligan downplayed the impact of U.S. trade measures on global commerce volumes but noted “the direction of travel is not positive, which is why equities are not making as much progress and investor sentiment is not more positive.”
In a reminder of the danger of trade disputes, shares in Chinese telecommunications giant ZTE Corp fell as much as 41.5 percent, wiping $3 billion off its market value, as it resumed trade after agreeing to pay up to $1.4 billion in penalties to the U.S. government.
Its Shenzhen shares fell by their 10 percent limit, dragging down mainland Chinese shares around 1 percent
The Mexican peso and the Canadian dollar, caught up in trade war risks, slipped further, with the former at a 16-month low against the dollar.
As the Fed meeting approached, the dollar inched up 0.2 percent against a basket of currencies and was close to a three-week high versus the yen, newstage reports.