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GLOBAL MARKETS-Brexit woes, mixed earnings see stocks lose steam, sterling lingers

Published 25/10/2019, 13:53
© Reuters.  GLOBAL MARKETS-Brexit woes, mixed earnings see stocks lose steam, sterling lingers
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* World stocks flat after two days of gains

* German Ifo steady, consumer mood at 3-year low

* U.S. futures point to flat open

* Sterling fragile after PM Johnson election call

* UK markets await news from Brussels on extension

By Karin Strohecker

LONDON, Oct 25 (Reuters) - Geopolitical tensions, muted

economic data and mixed earnings stymied global stocks on Friday

with sterling languishing near a one week lows amid a new bout

of Brexit anxiety.

European stock markets traded broadly softer with the pan

regional STOXX 600 .STOXX slipping 0.3%, with Germany's DAX

.GDAXI eased 0.2% while Britain's FTSE .FTSE fell 0.4%.

Losses were led by the food and beverage sector .SX3P

weighed after the world's largest beer maker by Anheuser-Busch

InBev ABI.BR tumbled 9% on disappointing quarterly profit and

a glum outlook as the earnings season rumbled on.

Yet a luxury goods rally led by Kering PRTP.PA helped lift

France's CAC index .FCHI 0.1% after its star fashion label

Gucci posted stronger-than-expected sales, demonstrating how

some brands have managed to shield from the fallout over

protests in Hong Kong. Meanwhile lacklustre data did little to quell underlying

concerns over the health of the global economy. Germany's Ifo

business climate came in broadly unchanged while

the mood among consumers in the block's largest economy fell to

its lowest in three years heading into November as job losses in

the auto and financial sector made shoppers more pessimistic

about the outlook for Europe's biggest economy. "We may have reached the bottom in the euro zone, but there

is still uncertainty that is troublesome in the U.S. Many

accounts will be waiting for the Fed," said Cyril Regnat, a

fixed income strategist at Natixis, referring to next week's

meeting of the U.S. central bank with markets pricing a 90%

chance of a rate cut. The lacklustre performance in Europe follows a mixed picture

in Asia where Japan's Nikkei .N225 finished up 0.2% and

Chinese blue-chips .CSI300 gained 0.6% while Hong Kong's Hang

Seng .HSI fell 0.28%.

U.S. futures pointed to a flat open on Wall Street following

a mixed Thursday, which saw strong quarterly results from

Microsoft MSFT.O and PayPal PYPL.O lift the Nasdaq 0.8%

while the Dow Jones Industrial Average .DJI slipped 0.1% after

3M MMM.N slashed its full-year earnings outlook.

Meanwhile Amazon.com Inc AMZN.O shares will be in focus

after the company on Thursday forecast revenue and profit for

the holiday quarter below expectations on fierce competition and

rising costs from its plan to speed up delivery times

globally Trade talks are also back in focus with U.S. and Chinese

trade officials due to discuss plans for China to buy more U.S.

farm products while Beijing in return will request cancellation

of some planned and existing U.S. tariffs on Chinese imports.

The two sides are working to try to agree on a text for a

"Phase 1" trade agreement announced by U.S. President Donald

Trump on Oct. 11, in time for him to sign it with China's

President Xi Jinping next month at a summit in Chile. Though

there are still large gaps to bridge.

However, a speech by U.S. Vice President Mike Pence on

Thursday, which criticised China's handling of the Hong Kong

protests and its treatment of Muslim Uighurs in the Xinjiang

region, did jangle nerves. "Geopolitical concerns such as the global trade war are

keeping investor optimism in check," said Paula Polito, client

strategy officer at UBS Global Wealth Management, adding the

firm's latest survey had found that investors had opted to raise

their holdings of cash well above usual levels.

A Reuters poll of economists showed that most think a

steeper decline in global growth is more likely than a

synchronised recovery, despite central bank easing. In his last meeting as president of the European Central

Bank, Mario Draghi left ECB policy and guidance unchanged, but

advised his successor to "never give up" on propping up the

eurozone economy in the face of a worsening outlook. TO BRUSSELS

In currency markets, the dollar .DXY traded flat against a

basket of six major currencies while the euro steadied after

falling to a one-week low against the U.S. dollar in the

previous session on the ECB leaving the door open for more

monetary policy easing, but keeping interest rates unchanged.

The British pound edged down to $1.2823, extending a 0.5%

drop on Thursday, after European Union failed to set a date for

Britain's departure from the bloc while the UK parliament

squabbled over Prime Minister Boris Johnson's call for a

December election to break the deadlock.

Johnson conceded on Thursday for the first time that he

would not meet his "do or die" deadline to leave the European

Union next week. "Because the UK Parliament passed the EU withdrawal

agreement, we think downside for GBP will be limited," said

Peter Kinsella, head of FX strategy at UBP. "However, the lead

time until the general election may prevent material GBP

appreciation until after the election."

EU ambassadors agreed in principle to a delay beyond the

Oct. 31 deadline, but will not decide the length of the

extension until Monday or Tuesday, an official said.

Euro zone bond markets have largely shrugged off the latest

Brexit events, with the benchmark 10-year German government

yield up 2 basis point at -0.38% DE10YT=RR .

The yield on benchmark 10-year Treasury notes US10YT=RR

also held steady.

Oil prices steadied after suffering falls earlier in the

session, but were on track for strong weekly gains as support

from a surprise draw in U.S. inventories and possible action

from OPEC and its allies to trim production further outweighed

broader economic concerns.

West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude CLc1 stood at $56.17 a

barrel and global benchmark Brent crude LCOc1 at $61.62 per

barrel. O/R

Gold and 2 year yields https://tmsnrt.rs/2PitwT5

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