Greek stocks bashed at restart

Picture: Yiannis Kourtoglou

Picture: Yiannis Kourtoglou

Published Aug 3, 2015

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London - The Greek stock market slumped when it re-opened on Monday after being shut down for five weeks, while weak data from China helped push oil prices to their lowest in six months and Asian stocks close to their 2015 lows.

Surveys showed China's factory activity contracted by the most in two years, ensuring a three-month sell-off in commodity and emerging markets would continue.

Brent oil fell to $51 a barrel, its lowest since the end of January. Industrial metal copper dropped to its weakest in six years. Gold was $1,093 an ounce after its worst month in two years.

Europe was also unsettled. Stocks in Athens plunged 23 percent when the market reopened after closing in late June. Lower-rated government bonds also saw some mild selling.

That offset solid economic data. Euro zone factory activity grew faster than previously thought in July. The Netherlands, Spain and Italy all reported healthy growth - Italy's expansion was its best in more than four years.

“Policymakers will be reassured by the robust growth rates seen in these countries and the resilience of the manufacturing sector as a whole,” said Chris Williamson, chief economist at survey compiler Markit. “Especially as growth is likely to pick up again now that Greece has jumped its latest hurdle in the ongoing debt crisis.”

Upbeat results from HSBC, Commerzbank and Heineken also helped offset Greece's troubles. The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 was 0.4 percent higher by 08h45 GMT.

Gains in Frankfurt and Paris compensated for a 0.2 percent dip by London's FTSE.

The great fall of China

China's poor data kept Asian markets from showing the same resilience.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell more than 1 percent to take it close to early July's lowest level of the year.

Shanghai shares shed 1.9 percent, Japan's Nikkei slid 0.3 percent and South Korea's Kospi fell 1 percent. Australian stocks dropped 0.4 percent.

“We believe the macro environment remains challenging for emerging market assets amid headwinds of low commodity prices, concerns over China and a looming Fed tightening cycle,” Barclays strategists wrote in a daily note in clients.

Recent flows data confirmed that trend. Net foreign selling from emerging Asia has reached nearly $10 billion over the past two months. Only India has seen minor inflows.

Among the main global currencies, the dollar held steady after sliding Friday on disappointing US wage growth data, at 124.14 yen and $1.0970 to the euro.

Recent US economic data has undermined the dollar, but the broader trend has been to the upside, after the Federal Reserve last week left the door open for a rate increase in September.

The US dollar has gained 7.75 percent so far this year against the world's main trading currencies, after a 12.8 percent rise last year.

And “the dollar's recent rally may just be getting started”, according to research from the BlackRock Investment Institute.

“Since the 1970s when the Bretton Woods fixed-currency regime ended and currencies began floating, a typical dollar rally has lasted roughly six to seven years,” according to Russ Koesterich, BlackRock global investment strategist.

REUTERS

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