EMERGING MARKETS-Trade war, recession fears put stocks on path for biggest daily drop since 2008
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MSCI EM stocks index down 8%, FX off 0.4%
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GS expects significant Chinese fiscal easing to offset tariffs
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Markets expect c.banks of
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CEE stocks selloff deepens in tariff fallout
By Johann M Cherian
Investors started the week parsing Trump's comments that
signaled they would have to endure more pain and he would not do
a deal with
A currencies gauge weakened 0.4% to the
dollar and was set for its largest daily drop since November,
with those of
Financial assets in the developed, developing and the
frontier world along with commodity prices were extending last
week's rout after the U.S. President's restrictive trade
policies was met with quick retaliation from
Investors are also anticipating a response from
"Investors had assumed Trump's trade taxes were a bargaining
tool, as during the first term. If the competence of
policymaking is questioned, markets will worry that economic
damage will be lasting," said from
On Monday, equities in
MSCI's index tracking
Investors also began to bet on the increasing likelihood of
corporate and sovereign credit defaults, as the five-year credit
default swap spread on the Markit Itraxx Asia ex-
The default swaps on
International sovereign bonds of a number of frontier
markets also suffered sharp selloffs with those of
Markets were pricing in that a stronger dollar against weaker emerging market currencies, combined with a weak global trade environment could increase the risk of a debt spiral in emerging markets.
Some economies such as
Worries of a global recession also had markets pencilling in the likelihood that the U.S. Federal Reserve could lower borrowing costs by at least five 25 basis points by December, according to data compiled by LSEG.
Markets are also expecting sluggish economic performance to
also speed up interest rate cuts by central banks in developing
economies at their upcoming monetary policy meets, such as
The market rout continued, with equities in
An index tracking central and eastern European stocks
tumbled 4.7%, with those of more open economies such as
Currencies such as the euro and Swiss franc
outperformed the dollar as markets priced in the likelihood that
the U.S. economy could also be hit with a recession, in the face
of tighter trade.
(Reporting by Johann M Cherian in Bengaluru; Editing by
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