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GLOBAL MARKETS-World stocks set for worst week since 2008 financial crisis

Published 13/03/2020, 10:27
© Reuters.  GLOBAL MARKETS-World stocks set for worst week since 2008 financial crisis
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* Coronavirus panic-selling shreds world markets

* MSCI's world equity index down 16% this week so far

* Italian govt debt hit again as death toll passes 1,000

* European shares steady on stimulus hopes

* Graphic: World FX rates in 2020 http://tmsnrt.rs/2egbfVh

By Abhinav Ramnarayan

LONDON, March 13 (Reuters) - World stocks were set on Friday

for their worst week since the 2008 financial crisis, with

coronavirus panic-selling hitting nearly every asset class and

investors fretting that central bank action may not be enough to

soothe the pain.

European stock markets were slightly higher on Friday on

hopes governments will step up spending, but only after several

sessions of sustained, heavy losses as investors faced the

possibility of a global recession that could be prolonged.

Warning signs still flashed, with Italian government bonds

tanking again on Friday morning, after suffering their worst day

in nine years in the previous session.

Italy and Spain meanwhile imposed trading curbs, banning

short-selling of dozens of stocks, to stem a market rout

triggered by the coronavirus outbreak that saw European stock

exchanges post their worst-ever losses on Thursday. The MSCI world equity index .MIWD00000PUS , which tracks

shares in 49 countries, hit a three-year low in Asian hours and

is down 16% this week so far -- its worst run since October 2008

when Lehman Brothers' collapse triggered the global crisis.

"Markets are quite prepared for a period of falling output.

The real fear is that you get second-round effects that result

in a nastier, longer recession in the global economy," said

Investec economist Philip Shaw.

"That is going to be very difficult to escape from given the

monetary pedal is very close to the floor in many

jurisdictions."

MSCI's main European Index .MSER was up 2.7% at the open,

after having fallen more than 20% over the past week.

Earlier, Japan's Nikkei .N225 fell 10% before paring

losses to close 6% lower. Australia's S&P/ASX200 .AXJO had its

wildest trading day on record, falling past 8% before surging in

the last minutes of trade to settle 4.4% higher at the close.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan

.MIAPJ0000PUS wobbled 0.1% higher by late afternoon after

falling more than 5% in morning trade.

The slight recovery came as central banks from the United

States to Australia pumped liquidity into their financial

systems and as hopes grew that U.S. Democrats and Republicans

could pass a stimulus package on Friday. PAIN

There was no such recovery in Italian government bonds, with

the benchmark 10-year yield -- which moves inversely to price --

rising another 16 basis points in early trade. IT10YT=RR

The yield had leapt by 55 bps on Thursday -- its worst day

since November 2011, near the peak of the euro zone debt crisis

-- after the European Central Bank kept rates steady and put the

onus firmly on governments, sending markets into a tailspin.

Italy is one of the worst-hit countries in Europe from the

spread of coronavirus, with the death toll shooting past 1,000

people and the government ordering blanket closures of

restaurants, bars and almost all shops. Oil LCOc1 steadied on Friday, after having dropped 7% on

Thursday on U.S. President Donald Trump's surprise travel ban

and on a flood of cheap supply coming into the market from Saudi

Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

Major currencies stabilised after furious dollar buying

overnight, with the euro EUR= finding a footing around $1.1200

and the Aussie AUD=D3 recovering to $0.6300.

For Reuters Live Markets blog on European and UK stock

markets, please click on: LIVE/

World stocks set for worst week since Oct 2008 https://tmsnrt.rs/2wPc5lV

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