MILAN—World shares steadied on Tuesday after a late revival on Wall Street, although global growth fears stoked by China’s COVID-19 curbs and fears of aggressive Fed tightening sapped risk appetite, lifting the dollar to new two-year highs.
The MSCI world equity index was up 0.2 percent from six-week lows at 1117 GMT, helped by a 0.7 percent gain in Europe’s STOXX 600 index on strong earnings by companies such as bank UBS and shipping group Maersk.
However, China’s blue chip index fell another 0.8 percent after its worst day in two years on Monday, even as the central bank vowed to step up prudent monetary policy support.
Three-quarters of Beijing’s 22 million people lined up for COVID-19 tests as the Chinese capital raced to stamp out a nascent outbreak and avert the city-wide lockdown that debilitated Shanghai for a month.
News that Elon Musk had clinched a deal to buy Twitter for $44 billion in cash buoyed tech stocks. Hong Kong’s tech sector rallied 2.9 percent, boosted by large firms such as Tencent and Alibaba.
The nervousness about China’s economic slowdown hit Australian shares, with a drop of 2.1 percent in the benchmark index, hurt particularly by declines in miners.
U.S. stock futures fell slightly in European trade, pointing to losses of around 0.4 percent for both the Nasdaq and the S&P 500 following strong tech-led gains on Monday.
“There’s a little bit of a growth scare coming in but in our view there won’t be a immediate slowdown to growth or inflation,” said Mike Kelly, head of global multi-asset at PineBridge Investments.
“We saw that European services PMI surprised to the upside and China, despite moving dreadfully slowly on stimulus, is still moving in the direction to try to speed things up,” he added.
But Manishi Raychaudhuri, Asia-Pacific equity strategist at BNP Paribas, said if Chinese lockdowns persisted, it would affect China’s economy significantly, with an impact on global supply chains.
Markets have also been fretting that an aggressive pace of tightening by the U.S. Fed could derail the global economy, which has only just started to recover from the pandemic.
The Fed is expected to raise rates by a half a percentage point at each of its next two meetings.
“It is unrealistic to think that the U.S. can raise interest rates in this way without looking at the real economy,” said Carlo Franchini, head of institutional clients at Banca Ifigest, adding he was also worried about hawkish signals in Europe.
The European Central Bank’s Martins Kazaks joined a chorus of policymakers urging a swift exit from stimulus measures, suggesting the bank should raise rates soon, and has room for up to three hikes this year.
“A rate hike right now would be madness ... it would just squeeze demand further, reducing consumption and drive the economy into stagflation, which in my view is a much more likely scenario than you might think,” Franchini added.
In currency markets, the dollar was in fine fettle on safe-haven demand. The dollar index against a basket of rivals rose to fresh two-year highs and was last up 0.2 percent at 101.8.
China’s offshore yuan rose 0.1 percent to 6.5622 per dollar, staying above Monday’s year-low of 6.6090 after the People’s Bank of China said it would cut the amount of foreign exchange banks must hold as reserves.
Benchmark U.S. 10-year yields fell 2 basis points to 2.797 percent, further retreating from hawkish Fed-induced highs hit last week, as the China lockdown and growth fears sent investors to the safety of U.S. bonds.
Germany’s 10-year yields, the benchmark of the euro bloc, also fell, by around 1 basis point to 0.835 percent, after falling more than 11 basis points the day before.
Oil prices steadied after the previous session’s 4 percent fall. Worries over China’s fuel demand were soothed by the central bank’s pledge to support an economy hit by COVID-19 curbs.
Brent crude rose 0.7 percent to $103.01 per barrel, while U.S. crude added 0.5 percent to $99.01 a barrel.
Spot gold rose 0.5 percent to $1,906.5 an ounce.