European stocks slumped and the euro fell Monday as the region’s worsening energy crisis added to risks for a global economy already facing high inflation and a wave of monetary tightening.
The Stoxx Europe 600 Index fell 1.5%. Energy stocks outperformed, while technology, construction and chemicals were laggards. An Asian equity index was also in the red, paced by losses in Hong Kong, where tech shares slid as traders weighed the risk of curbs on investment from the US. Wall Street contracts wavered after the worst week for world shares since June.
The dollar jumped as commodity-linked currencies joined the euro’s retreat to a two-decade low. Oil rallied before an OPEC+ meeting on supply. Cash Treasuries and US stocks are closed because of Labor Day.
Russia’s Gazprom PJSC last week again halted its key European gas pipeline indefinitely after Group of Seven leaders agreed to implement a price cap on Russian oil as the Kremlin continues its war in Ukraine. Natural gas surged more than 30% in Europe and nations there could roll out special steps to rein in power costs. Germany plans a $65 billion package to shield consumers.
In the UK, Conservative Party members are expected to name Liz Truss as their leader, clearing her way to become prime minister. Her plan to “turbo-charge” the economy by slashing taxes is already worrying investors amid double-digit inflation. The British pound weakened against the greenback.
Elsewhere, Bitcoin dropped below the $20,000 level. Gold was little changed.
US real yields are back in positive territory and continue to rise
What to watch this week:
UK prime minister to be announced, Monday
OPEC+ meeting on supply, Monday
Australia rate decision, Tuesday
Apple event due to feature new iPhones, watches, Wednesday
Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey at Treasury Committee, Wednesday
Fed’s Beige Book of regional economic activity, Wednesday
Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester due to speak, Wednesday
European Central Bank rate decision, Monetary authorities including Europe’s central bank are set to keep hiking interest rates this week to fight inflation despite the darkening global economic outlook due to risks such power shortages and China’s Covid curbs. An attendant advance in real yields -- seen as the true cost of money for borrowers -- poses an obstacle to a variety of risk assets.
“The EU energy situation highlights the very challenging environment for central banks as they normalize policy settings and continue to hike,” said Su-Lin Ong, head of Australian economic and fixed-income strategy at Royal Bank of Canada.
Markets also face more uncertainty from US-China tension. The Biden administration is considering moves to curb US investment in Chinese technology firms and will allow Trump-era merchandise import tariffs to continue while the levies are reviewed.
Separately, China extended its lockdown in districts of the megacity Chengdu and ordered more mass testing