Global stocks in steep weekly retreat after central bank rate rises

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Global stocks have fallen sharply this week after a trio of major central banks boosted borrowing costs, compounding worries about the health of the global economy.

A FTSE gauge of developed and emerging market shares has dropped 5.4 per cent since the end of last week, which would mark its worst performance since the pandemic-driven ructions of March 2020.

An equity rout on Thursday had pushed Wall Street’s S&P 500 gauge down 3.3 per cent, in a sign of the increasingly gloomy market outlook as the Bank of England and the Swiss National Bank followed the Federal Reserve in raising interest rates to tackle soaring inflation.

The week’s steep overall slide came even as equity markets turned higher on Friday, with the S&P adding 0.6 per cent in early trading and the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite rising 1.1 per cent. In Europe, the regional Stoxx 600 rose 0.8 per cent, having lost 2.5 per cent in the previous session.

Some analysts believe the decline in European equities has bottomed out, with Bank of America upgrading its view of the Stoxx from “negative” to “neutral” on the premise that a sharp drop since January’s all-time high has priced in any of the bad macroeconomic news it expects to materialise. “We expect central banks’ focus to shift from inflation to weakening growth,” the Wall Street bank said.

The SNB on Thursday surprised markets with its first rate rise since the lead-up to the global financial crisis in 2007, lifting borrowing costs by half a percentage point after inflation in the country hit a 14-year high last month. The BoE joined the trend hours later, with a 0.25 percentage point increase as it warned that UK inflation would climb above 11 per cent this year. A day earlier, the Fed had lifted rates by 0.75 percentage points in its biggest such move since 1994.

“The more aggressive line by central banks adds to headwinds for both economic growth and equities,” said Mark Haefele, chief investment officer at UBS Global Wealth Management. “The risks of a recession are rising, while achieving a soft landing for the US economy appears increasingly challenging.”

Indicating traders’ anticipation of further equity market volatility to come, the Vix — often referred to as Wall Street’s “fear gauge” — registered a reading of almost 33 on Friday, well above its long-run average.

In government debt markets, the yield on the benchmark 10-year US Treasury note fell 0.07 percentage point to 3.24 per cent, after sharp swings in recent days as investors adjusted to expectations of higher interest rates and an end to the Fed’s bond-buying programme that pumped billions of dollars into the US economy. Bond yields fall as their prices rise.

The Fed’s aggressive rate rises have also hit corporate debt markets, with investors pulling $6.6bn out of funds that buy lower-quality, US high-yield bonds in the week to June 15.

Meanwhile, Italian bonds continued to rally after European Central Bank president Christine Lagarde told the bloc’s finance ministers that doubting the central bank’s commitment to fighting financial “fragmentation” of the region “would be a serious mistake”.

Italy’s debt has rebounded from a heavy sell-off after the ECB said at an unplanned meeting this week that it would speed up work on a new tool to counter surging borrowing costs in the euro bloc’s weaker economies. Italian 10-year yields fell 0.14 percentage points to 3.62 per cent on Friday, down from a high of 4.19 per cent earlier in the week.

In currency markets, the yen weakened as much as 2 per cent to ¥134.91 against the dollar after the Bank of Japan diverged from the strategy of aggressive tightening taken by its global peers by leaving policy rates unchanged.

Additional reporting by Tommy Stubbington

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