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© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A man on a bicycle stands in front of an electronic board displaying the Shanghai Stock Exchange Index, the Nikkei Stock Price Index and the Dow Jones Industrial Average outside a brokerage firm in Tokyo, Japan on September 22, 2022. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-hoon
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Written by Chris Prentice, Dara Ranasinghe, and Naomi Rovnik
NEW YORK/LONDON (Reuters) – Global stocks remained stuck near one-month lows and government bond markets came under fresh selling pressure on Friday, a day after a slew of central banks raised interest rates and signaled that the struggle to tame inflation was on. . Not finished yet.
Eurozone bond yields jumped after the European Central Bank pledged more monetary tightening to fight inflation. The US Federal Reserve raised interest rates on Wednesday.
The euro rose 0.077%, with the euro declining 0.09%.
Wall Street fell after data showed business activity contracted in the United States in December, but falling demand helped quell inflation significantly.
It was down 1.08%, lost 1.15%, and was down 0.83% by 10:24 AM ET (1524 GMT).
On Thursday, major US indices suffered their biggest daily percentage drop in weeks. [.N]
European stocks were poised for a weekly loss, as fears of a recession mounted. The region’s share index fell 1.33%. ()
Global equities were also under pressure after S&P Global’s (NYSE:) flash PMI showed that economic activity in the eurozone contracted for the sixth consecutive month in December, though the slowdown also eased to its slowest pace in four months.
In Asia, the index closed at its lowest in more than a month, and MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific stocks outside Japan was set for its worst week in two months.
All of this sent the MSCI World Equity Index down 1% on Friday, languishing near its lowest level in more than a month.
A hawkish message from central bankers this week has abruptly put an end to optimism that cap interest rates are on the horizon.
Sunil Krishnan, Head of Multi-Asset Management, said: Aviva (LON:) Investors.
The ECB made a 50 basis point hike just like the Fed. Both opted for a smaller raise this time around, but it’s been reported that there are more raises to come.
Its upbeat message prompted a second day of aggressive selling across European bond markets as German benchmark 10-year bond yields jumped.
The yield on Germany’s two-year rate-sensitive bund rose to 2.503% on Friday, the highest level since 2008.
“We now expect the ECB to 3.25% (including 50 basis points in March)) and the Fed to 5.25%, which calls for continued pressure,” said Christoph Rieger, Head of Interest Rates and Credit Research at Commerzbank (ETR). on returns and spreads. ).
growth concerns
In China, where markets are teetering on an uncertain reopening, relief from the apparent resolution of the long-running accounting access dispute with the United States was not enough to boost sentiment.
Meanwhile, Japanese manufacturing activity contracted at the fastest pace in more than two years in December, while US retail sales fell more than expected in November.
The prospect of further monetary tightening globally has kept investors worried about long-term growth.
In commodities, the price rose 0.77%, but is still on track for its biggest weekly decline since mid-November. Oil gave up recent gains, with futures down 2.83%.