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News ID: 101158
Publish Date : 02 April 2022 - 22:33

World Stocks Dip on Conflict, Recession Worries

LONDON (Reuters) - World stocks dipped further from recent six-week highs on Friday on worries about the conflict in Ukraine and recession risks, and oil fell $2 a barrel on reserve releases.
European buyers of Russian gas faced a deadline to start paying in roubles on Friday, while negotiations aimed at ending the five-week conflict were set to resume.
“The recession risk of selected countries such as Germany from the stopping of gas delivery would be non-negligible,” said Sebastien Galy, senior macro strategist at Nordea Asset Management.
Galy added, however, that “Russia is essentially a petrol station. If a petrol station doesn’t sell its products, it goes bankrupt - they are not in a position of power”.
The conflict threatens also to disrupt global food supplies.
MSCI’s global share index fell 0.17 percent to 710.22, against a high of 724.49 hit on Wednesday, heading for little change on the week.
U.S. S&P futures rose 0.29 percent while European stocks and Britain’s FTSE 100 index were steady.
BoFA strategists said recession risks will “jump” in the coming months as a “bull era of central bank excess, Wall Street inflation (and) globalization (is) ending”.
In its place “a bear era of government intervention, social and political polarization, Main Street inflation & geopolitical isolationism (is) starting,” they added.
U.S. and European shares notched their biggest quarterly drops since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 in the quarter that ended on March 31.
But the quarterly drop in US shares masked a late comeback in the S&P 500 index, which rallied from a near-13 percent decline to finish the quarter off about 5 percent.
MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 0.34 percent on Friday.
In Tokyo, the Nikkei was down 0.56 percent, notching up a 1.7 percent weekly fall.
Supply disruption and surging raw material costs drove Japanese business confidence to a nine-month low last quarter, data on Friday showed.
Oil prices continued to slide following an announcement on Thursday of huge releases from U.S. strategic reserves and ahead of a Friday meeting of oil-consuming nations to discuss their own reserve releases.
U.S. crude futures fell more than $2 a barrel to $98.17 and Brent futures were also down $2 at $102.66 a barrel.
Oil is on course for a 14 percent weekly fall - the sharpest in almost two years, after an earlier surge due largely to the Ukraine conflict had seen prices rise by more than 30 percent.
Investors are fretting over whether inflationary pressures will force central banks into aggressive rate hikes, potentially triggering recessions.
U.S. March jobs data at 1230 GMT will be watched for indications of wage inflation, in addition to the headline jobs figure.
“Average hourly earnings are surging but less quickly than inflation,” said Galy.
The closely-watched spread between U.S. two-year and 10-year notes is nearly zero.
An inversion in this part of the U.S. yield curve is viewed as a reliable signal that a recession may follow in one to two years. Benchmark 10-year notes last yielded 2.4170 percent, while the two-year yield was at 2.4057 percent.
The dollar, which has benefited from safe-haven flows and expectations of rising U.S. rates, remained firm. Against a basket of peers, the greenback was up 0.16 percent at 98.471, and it was up 0.67 percent against the yen at 122.48.