Stock markets slip again ahead of Fed policy review

Markets await next move in Ukraine and policy review by US Federal Reserve later

Tokyo’s Nikkei stock average  bucked the trend overnight and eked out a 0.4 per cent gain.  Photograph: Toru Hanai/Reuters
Tokyo’s Nikkei stock average bucked the trend overnight and eked out a 0.4 per cent gain. Photograph: Toru Hanai/Reuters

Stock markets slipped today, while major bond and currency markets held steady ahead of a US Federal Reserve policy decision later in the day and as military tensions between Ukraine and Russia ratcheted up.

British financial markets largely followed that pattern although sterling recovered some recent losses before a raft of potentially market-moving news including the government’s annual budget, Bank of England minutes and unemployment data.

Europe’s major stock markets were down as much as a third of one per cent in early trading, following Asian shares lower after the the MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan lost 0.2 per cent.

Underlying worries over China’s financial and property sectors bubbled to the surface, pushing Chinese stocks lower and the yuan to its weakest level in a year through 6.20 per dollar.

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This is the first time the yuan has traded more than 1 percent beyond the midpoint set by the central bank after the daily trading band was widened to 2 percent. Global investors’ main focus, however, remain the Fed and Russia.

“I expect gradually the focus to shift away from the tensions between Russia and the West, unless we see actual violence or some type of events other than sanctions that would be seen as an escalation,” Jan von Gerich, chief strategist at Nordea in Helsinki, said.

Earlier, pro-Russian units took control of part of a naval base in Ukraine, in the clearest sign so far that Russian soldiers and volunteers who support them had begun to take control of Ukrainian military facilities across the Black Sea peninsula.

Ukraine’s acting defence minister Ihor Tenyukh said shortly after that his country’s forces would not withdraw from Crimea even though Russian president Vladimir Putin has signed a treaty to make it part of Russia.

Later on Wednesday in Washington, the Fed is set to trim its bond-buying stimulus by $10 billion a month for a third time in a row and will probably rewrite its guidance on when it might eventually raise interest rates.

The moves would represent both continuity at the US central bank as Janet Yellen chairs her first policy-setting meeting and a nod to indications that recent economic weakness is not solely down to harsh winter weather.

Earlier this monring Britain’s FTSE 100 was down 0.25 per cent at 6,589 points, Germany’s DAX was up 0.1 per cent at 9,250 points and France’s CAC 40 was down 0.2 per cent at 4,304 points.

The FTSE Eurofirst index of the leading 300 European stocks was flat around 1,305 points.

Reuters