Global markets fall sharply despite boost from US
plan to relax Covid travel
Concerns grow over rising inflation and possible
contagion in China’s property market from debt-stricken developer Evergrande
Airline shares soared after US plans to relax Covid
travel rules were announced however nervousness still hangs over the global
financial markets.
Richard
Partington and Graeme Wearden
Mon 20 Sep
2021 18.47 BST
Global
financial markets have fallen sharply amid concern over rising inflation and
the threat of contagion in China’s property sector from the debt-stricken
developer Evergrande, despite a boost from the relaxation of US travel rules.
Markets
around the world came under selling pressure, with the FTSE 100 in the UK
slumping by 60 points, or 0.9%, to 6,903.
Europe’s
Stoxx 600, a pan-European index of listed companies, closed down 1.7%. Shares
fell by more than 2% in Germany, France and Italy and 1.2% in Spain.
US markets
were also down sharply in early afternoon trading in New York, with the Dow
Jones losing almost 2%, the S&P 500 almost 2% lower and the tech-heavy
Nasdaq down more than 2.4%.
It came
despite a rally in airline shares after the US announcement of plans to
partially lift a travel ban on UK and EU citizens imposed in response to
Covid-19.
Shares in
British Airways’ owner IAG soared by 11%, making it the best performer on the
FTSE 100, while the jet engine maker Rolls-Royce was also among top risers,
with shares ending the day up more than 4%. Shares in the German airline
Lufthansa and Air France-KLM rose about 5%.
“The
lifting of travel restrictions for double-jabbed visitors to the US provided
the thrust needed to send the recovery in airline stocks full throttle,” said
Susannah Streeter, a senior investment and markets analyst at the investment
firm Hargreaves Lansdown.
The rise in
airline stocks helped London’s blue-chip index claw back some losses from
earlier on Monday. However, concerns over China’s heavily indebted property
sector rattled markets on a choppy day in dealing rooms across the City.
Analysts
said that soaring energy costs and wider inflationary pressures risked
upsetting the economic recovery from lockdown, at a time when growth in several
advanced economies was slowing.
“Still
nervousness hangs over the financial markets, with inflation worries nagging
investors, particularly with gas prices sky-high. Concerns are also mounting
that problems are piling up in the Chinese economy due to the precariousness of
Evergrande, the property conglomerate,” Streeter said.
Central
banks, including the US Federal Reserve and Bank of England, will provide
updates this week, with expectations among financial market investors for a
gradual retreat from emergency pandemic stimulus at a delicate juncture for the
economic recovery from Covid-19.
Walid
Koudmani, a market analyst at the online trading firm XTB, said: “Investors
will be keeping an eye on the upcoming central bank decisions later this week
along with any new developments in the Chinese real estate market, which could
potentially cause a domino effect.”
The annual
rate of UK inflation jumped by the highest percentage on record in August from
the previous month, reflecting a rapid recovery from last year’s lockdown as
well as a sharp jump in food, drink and energy prices.
Wholesale
gas and electricity costs have surged to record levels in recent months,
pushing several small energy providers into administration and threatening to
boil over into a cost-of-living crisis for British consumers this winter.
It comes as
investors warn contagion risks in China’s massively indebted property industry
could rippled through world markets, after shares in Evergrande plunged on
Monday to an 11-year low.
The
country’s second-largest real estate developer faces a deadline for debt
payments this week, as the firm scrambles to rebuild confidence in the
business.
Experts
have warned that if the company, which owes $300bn to contractors, investors
and homebuyers, defaults on its debts, it could trigger broader issues in the
world’s second biggest economy. A crucial interest payment deadline on some of
its outstanding bonds looms on Thursday.
Analysts
said any downturn in China would have an impact on demand for natural
resources, given its status as the word’s largest consumer of many commodities,
with worrying parallels to 2015, when fears about Chinese debt troubles
prompted a broad-based selloff in financial markets.
Russ Mould,
an investment director at the Manchester-based stockbroker AJ Bell, said:
“There’s plenty for the market to fret about, and those arguing the markets
were looking frothy are seeing some of that froth disappear as a brewing crisis
in China, surging gas prices in Europe and concerns about stagflation combine
to sink stocks.”

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