Stocks Edge Lower Amid Hong Kong Protests, Trade Woes
August 12 2019 - 6:37AM
Dow Jones News
By Avantika Chilkoti
-- U.S. stock futures slipped
-- Chinese stocks rose as the yuan's slow devaluation
continued
-- Hong Kong equities dropped after flights were canceled
U.S. stock futures and European equities edged down Monday,
while Hong Kong stocks dropped after protests at the city's airport
prompted authorities to cancel flights.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index closed 0.4% lower, after the city's
airport authority canceled more than 100 flights. That was in
response to thousands of demonstrators thronging the airport to
protest police for their handling of this summer's protests.
The Shanghai Composite Index climbed 1.5% as the Chinese central
bank continued to weaken the yuan, though at a slower pace than
traders had expected. That eased concerns of a sharp devaluation
after President Trump last week accused China of manipulating its
currency.
"While the direction of travel is clear and that the yuan is
likely to weaken further, it would appear that as long as the
decline happens gradually, markets are more likely to be
comfortable with it," Michael Hewson, chief market analyst at CMC
Markets UK, said in a research note.
The benchmark Stoxx Europe 600 index wavered between gains and
losses, with Germany's DAX up marginally, while U.K. and French
markets ticked down. Futures tied to the S&P 500 index fell
0.6%.
Concerns about the fate of U.S.-China trade talks -- following
Mr. Trump's comments on Friday that negotiations could break off --
had left U.S. stocks lower for the week, and prompted investors to
look to haven assets.
Yields on 10-year U.S. Treasurys fell to 1.690% Monday from
1.731% Friday, continuing the steep slide from last week. Yields
fall when bond prices rise.
The gloomy outlook reflected in bond markets -- where yields
across the globe have dropped in recent months -- could soon be
reflected in stocks too, according to Neil Dwane, global strategist
at Allianz Global Investors.
"If they [yields] keep edging down, the equity market is clearly
wrong because the bond market will be telling you we have one
mother of a recession coming," he said.
Among the biggest gainers in Europe was Tullow Oil, whose shares
rose about 17% after the company said it had found more oil off the
coast of Guyana. Shares in ams, a 3-D sensor maker that supplies to
Apple, dropped 9.4% on reports that the Austrian company has put in
a bid to take over German lighting company Osram Licht, creating a
bidding war with private-equity buyers. Shares in Osram were up
8.6% on Monday.
In Asia, amid a day of light trading with a number of regional
exchanges closed, Cathay Pacific fell 4.9%, putting the Hong Kong
airline on course to close at its lowest level in more than a
decade. China's aviation authority on Friday ordered the carrier to
remove all employees involved in the protests in Hong Kong from
flights to mainland China. The most closely watched class of shares
in Swire Pacific, the Hong Kong conglomerate that is Cathay's
largest shareholder, fell 6.2%.
This week, investors will watch for new consumer price inflation
estimates from the U.S. on Tuesday after the Federal Reserve cited
subdued inflation as one reason for cutting rates last week.
Consumer prices increased 0.1% between May and June.
"Given the low unemployment and strong consumer confidence in
the U.S., it's unlikely we get a recession any time soon," said
Patrick Spencer, managing director at U.S. investment firm Baird.
"It's a muddle-along economy then with markets continuing to trade
higher."
--William Horner, Steven Russolillo and Frances Yoon contributed
to this article.
Write to Avantika Chilkoti at Avantika.Chilkoti@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
August 12, 2019 06:22 ET (10:22 GMT)
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