Da de europæiske finansministre ikke kunne enes om en større aktion mod coronakrisen, dykkede de europæiske aktier. Det skyldtes også negative meldinger om den recession, der kommer som følge af coronakrisen.
Uddrag fra Fidelity/Marketwatch:
European stocks fall on grim economic forecasts and EU failure to agree a pandemic recovery plan
European stocks fell Wednesday, as a meeting of finance ministers ended with no agreement on a response to the economic crisis caused by the coronavirus outbreak, and amid grim economic forecasts for France and Germany.
The Stoxx Europe 600 index fell 1% to 323.30. The early losses threaten to break a two-session streak of gains, with Tuesday’s session ending in 1.88% gain. Elsewhere, the FTSE 100 index fell 1.3% as investors continued to watch for updates on the health of British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who has been in intensive care since Monday after his coronavirus symptoms worsened.
European stocks slipped on the heels of a weak U.S. session on Tuesday (http://www.marketwatch.com/story/dow-futures- rise-about-900-points-as-coronavirus-slowdown-hope-buoys-stocks-2020-04-07). Dow industrial futures were last up 14 points to 22,502 in what has been a choppy trading so far.
The French CAC 40 slid 1.9% after the Bank of France predicted a 6% slump (http://www.marketwatch.com/story/bank-of- france-sees-6-gdp-contraction-in-q1-2020-04-08) in first quarter gross domestic production — the biggest fall since the World War II.
A joint forecast from 5 leading German institutions (http://www.marketwatch.com/story/german-economy-forecast-to- slump-42-this-year-2020-04-08) said the pandemic will cause the country’s economy to shrink by 4.2%. It sees the German economy slumping 9.8% in the second quarter, the worst figure ever recorded since quarterly accounts were tracked in 1970, with a rebound of 5.8% next year. The German DAX index (DAX) fell 0.8%.
Meanwhile, a Eurogroup of finance ministers meeting ended in the early hours of Wednesday after 16 hours of talks and no agreement (http://www.marketwatch.com/story/eu-finance-ministers-stall-on-coronavirus-plan-2020-04-08) on a united approach to shouldering the burden of the virus’s fallout. Among the areas of contention, countries like Italy and Spain would like to see issuance of eurozone debt, but the Netherlands and Germany have resisted. There were also rifts over the conditions attached to credit lines from the European Stability Mechanism – the EU agency that provides financial assistance to eurozone countries.
Globally, cases of the coronavirus continued to slow, though Tuesday marked the most global fatalities in a single day, which strategists at Deutsche Bank say has been taking place due to catching up from incomplete reporting over the weekend.
While the Chinese city of Wuhan, the epicenter of the outlook, has begun lifting travel restrictions and Italy is also starting to look at easing a strict lockdown as new deaths and cases start flattening out, New York reported the highest deaths in a single day thus far.
Jasper Lawler, head of research at London Capital Group, said pandemic curves may not flatten in time for April deadlines set to review any lockdown measures, which means many countries will be enduring another three weeks of restrictions.
“An extension of lockdowns and associated deeper economic hardship is probably priced in but raises the chance of a retest of the March lows in stock markets,” said Lawler, in a note to clients.