Major Economies Face Recession Amid War
SINGAPORE (Dispatches) -- Stock markets across Europe and Asia on Tuesday mostly extended recent sharp losses on lingering worries about possible recession for major economies.
Panic has swept through trading floors since data on Friday showed U.S. consumer prices rising at their fastest pace in decades on surging energy and food costs caused by the Ukraine war and supply chain snarls.
The pain has been felt across all assets, with bitcoin threatening to fall below $20,000 for the first time since December 2020, currencies retreating against the dollar, and safe havens including the yen and gold feeling the squeeze.
Investors are bracing for the Federal Reserve’s interest rate decision Wednesday as it struggles to walk a fine line between reining in inflation and trying to keep the economy on track.
“While there is no doubt that inflation is a considerable challenge for the U.S. at this point, slamming on the brakes too hard risks pushing the economy off its track,” said Tai Hui of JP Morgan Asset Management.
Fears that the world’s top economy is heading for a recession sent Wall Street plunging Monday, with the broad-based S&P 500 stocks index sinking into a bear market after dropping more than 20 percent from its recent peak.
Elsewhere, data Tuesday confirmed annual inflation in Germany, Europe’s biggest economy, hit a record 7.9 percent in May.
Huge price increases for energy and food have pushed inflation in Germany to its highest level since the oil crisis more than 50 years ago.
“The main reason for the high inflation is still prices increase for energy products,” said Destatis President Georg Thiel.
The inflation rate is therefore the highest ever recorded in reunified Germany.
According to the data published by the UK’s Office for National Statistics (ONS), Britons are suffering from soaring inflation, which has caused the value of wages to fall at the fastest pace in more than a decade.
“Pay in real terms is falling at its fastest rate in over a decade,” with UK inflation at a 40-year high, said ONS Head of Economic Statistics, Sam Beckett.
The country’s annual inflation rate has soared to nine percent, causing a cost-of-living crisis for millions of Britons.
The unemployment rate across the UK has also risen to 3.8 percent, in comparison to the rate of 3.7 percent in the first quarter of the year, with record-high vacancies seeking for employees, the ONS said in its statement.
“With inflation hurtling towards double digit territory, many workers are increasingly finding that their wages are not stretching wide enough to meet the bumper cost of seemingly everything from food to petrol,” said Myron Jobson, senior