AFP, New York :
World stock markets dropped Friday amid fears over global growth following weak US job figures, a downgrade to the European Central Bank growth forecast, and data showing Chinese trade fell off a cliff last month.
US data showed job creation ground to a virtual halt in February, just the latest warning of a lean growth ahead, after the ECB slashed its growth and inflation forecasts and China unveiled a growth target that would be its slowest in three decades.
Bourses in Europe and Asia finished solidly lower. Wall Street also retreated, although an afternoon rally kept losses to a minimum. The broad-based S&P 500 finished down 0.2 percent.
US employers added just 20,000 net new positions in February, collapsing from a blockbuster gain of 311,000 in January and far below the 173,000 economists had projected, according to a US Labor Department report.
CMC Markets analyst Michael Hewson said the paltry headline jobs number was offset by higher wages and a drop in unemployment to 3.8 percent from 4.0 percent.
But Hewson added “the recent rally in global equity markets appears to have run out of steam as investors start to take profits over concerns that the macro economic backdrop is much weaker than was thought.”
– ‘Selloff continues apace’ -Asia’s markets suffered sharp losses after China revealed exports plunged more than 20 percent in February, while imports also fell sharply – both badly missing expectations.
“The stock market selloff has continued apace today, with a sharp drop in Chinese exports leading to further weakness across the board,” said IG analyst Joshua Mahony.
London’s FTSE 100 index closed down 0.7 percent, while Frankfurt fell 0.5 percent and Paris shed 0.7 percent, extending Thursday’s ECB-fueled losses.
The euro managed to rebounded slightly after hitting a near two-year low
after the ECB news on Thursday
The ECB said eurozone interest rates would be stuck around historic lows
until the year’s end at best, with central bank chief Mario Draghi warning
the region was “coming out of, and maybe we still are in a period of
continued weakness and pervasive uncertainty.”
British Prime Minister Theresa May will try to get her divorce deal from
the European Union over the line in the vote on Tuesday, just two and half
weeks before the UK is set to exit the European Union.
The pound fell against both the euro and the dollar.
World stock markets dropped Friday amid fears over global growth following weak US job figures, a downgrade to the European Central Bank growth forecast, and data showing Chinese trade fell off a cliff last month.
US data showed job creation ground to a virtual halt in February, just the latest warning of a lean growth ahead, after the ECB slashed its growth and inflation forecasts and China unveiled a growth target that would be its slowest in three decades.
Bourses in Europe and Asia finished solidly lower. Wall Street also retreated, although an afternoon rally kept losses to a minimum. The broad-based S&P 500 finished down 0.2 percent.
US employers added just 20,000 net new positions in February, collapsing from a blockbuster gain of 311,000 in January and far below the 173,000 economists had projected, according to a US Labor Department report.
CMC Markets analyst Michael Hewson said the paltry headline jobs number was offset by higher wages and a drop in unemployment to 3.8 percent from 4.0 percent.
But Hewson added “the recent rally in global equity markets appears to have run out of steam as investors start to take profits over concerns that the macro economic backdrop is much weaker than was thought.”
– ‘Selloff continues apace’ -Asia’s markets suffered sharp losses after China revealed exports plunged more than 20 percent in February, while imports also fell sharply – both badly missing expectations.
“The stock market selloff has continued apace today, with a sharp drop in Chinese exports leading to further weakness across the board,” said IG analyst Joshua Mahony.
London’s FTSE 100 index closed down 0.7 percent, while Frankfurt fell 0.5 percent and Paris shed 0.7 percent, extending Thursday’s ECB-fueled losses.
The euro managed to rebounded slightly after hitting a near two-year low
after the ECB news on Thursday
The ECB said eurozone interest rates would be stuck around historic lows
until the year’s end at best, with central bank chief Mario Draghi warning
the region was “coming out of, and maybe we still are in a period of
continued weakness and pervasive uncertainty.”
British Prime Minister Theresa May will try to get her divorce deal from
the European Union over the line in the vote on Tuesday, just two and half
weeks before the UK is set to exit the European Union.
The pound fell against both the euro and the dollar.