UK finance minister warns of ‘dangerous cocktail’ of threats for 2016

By David Milliken

LONDON (Reuters) – Finance minister George Osborne said on Thursday that Britain’s economy was not immune from a “dangerous cocktail” of threats from abroad, and urged against complacency after two years of solid growth.

Osborne — whom Prime Minister David Cameron has named as a possible successor — said in a new year’s message that Britain faced headwinds from slower growth in China, Brazil and Russia as well as tensions in the Middle East.

“The economy has slipped down the list of many people’s everyday concerns. But the biggest risk is that people think that it’s ‘job done’,” Osborne said.

Britain has been the fastest growing of its peers for the past couple of years, but Cameron and Osborne regularly focus on the danger of economic mismanagement. Cameron spoke of “red warning lights” from the world economy in late 2014.

Since becoming finance minister in 2010, Osborne has made reducing Britain’s large budget deficit his priority, and more than halved it to just under 5 percent of gross domestic product during his first five years in office.

In the run-up to May 2015’s national election, Osborne said he wanted Britain to run a budget surplus in normal economic times, a goal the opposition Labour Party and many economists think is too stringent and risks hurting growth.

Public borrowing during the current financial year has come in above forecasts, raising doubts about whether Osborne will meet his most immediate fiscal goals.

Business surveys have also suggested the outlook for economic growth is darker than thought a few months ago. The British Chambers of Commerce said on Thursday that manufacturing exports had stagnated for the first time since 2009.

“This year opens with a dangerous cocktail of new threats,” Osborne said. “We are only seven days into the New Year, and already we’ve had worrying news about stock market falls around the world, the slowdown in China (and) deep problems in Brazil and in Russia.”

While a big fall in oil prices was good for most British consumers and businesses, it would hurt oil and gas output and investors who had lent to the sector, he said. Tensions between Saudi Arabia and Iran were also a worry.

Osborne made no mention of the referendum on European Union membership which Cameron has promised to hold before the end of 2017 but which many analysts expect to take place as early as June. They warn it could cause businesses to delay investment.

(Reporting by David Milliken; Editing by Ruth Pitchford)

China lets yuan slide, starts fight to halt turbulence

By Lu Jianxin and Patrick Graham

SHANGHAI/LONDON (Reuters) – China allowed the biggest fall in the yuan in five months on Thursday, pressuring regional currencies and sending global stock markets tumbling as investors feared it would trigger competitive devaluations.

For the second time this week China’s stock markets were suspended for the day before an announcement late in the evening in Shanghai that authorities were abandoning the new circuit-breaking mechanism for halting trade in overly volatile markets.

That heightened anticipation about how Chinese markets may respond on Friday.

The People’s Bank of China shocked traders by setting the official midpoint rate on the yuan, also known as the renminbi (RMB), 0.5 percent weaker at 6.5646 per dollar on Thursday, the lowest since March 2011.

That tracked record losses in the more open offshore currency market and was the biggest daily fall since an abrupt devaluation of nearly 2 percent last August.

But dealers said the PBOC had then intervened heavily to reverse a more than 1 percent fall in offshore rates for the yuan after they hit a record low of 6.7600 per dollar.

The yuan took back all of its losses to stand a quarter of a percent stronger at 6.6755 in European and U.S. trade.

“It’s very similar to the previous round (in August) where they weaken the official rate and then intervene against the dollar offshore to beat back the speculators,” said a yuan trader with one international bank in London.

“That would be a way of starting to stabilize the market.”

The PBOC’s China Foreign Exchange Trade System (CFETS) repeated on Thursday that there was no basis for the yuan’s continuous depreciation and that it was stable against a basket of currencies in 2015.

But the central bank’s fixings have also helped drive the yuan down this week against other major currencies, including a 3.5 percent fall against the yen and 0.8 percent against the euro.

That raised concerns that China might be aiming for a competitive devaluation to help its struggling exporters.

“That’s the fear of the market,” said Sim Moh Siong, FX strategist for Bank of Singapore, adding that it was a zero sum game as other currencies weakened in response, and the end result would be greater volatility.

Others were unsure what policy Beijing was pursuing.

“Frankly speaking, we are still not quite sure where the PBOC boundary is at the current stage,” said Singapore-based Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation (OCBC).

“The fear of the unknown has become the largest risk for RMB in the near term, despite China’s sizable current account surplus.”

The Australian dollar, often used by foreign exchange dealers as a liquid proxy for the yuan, fell more than half a U.S. cent. The Korean won, however, recovered almost all of its initial falls with banks saying the Bank of Korea had probably also intervened to support the currency.

OCBC noted that against a basket of currencies, the RMB index was still only fractionally down for 2016.

ANZ bank said in a note that the PBOC’s action would nevertheless “create one-way expectation of RMB depreciation, propelling capital flight and leading to significant financial instability”.

DECLINING RESERVES

Data on Thursday showed China’s foreign exchange reserves fell by the most on record last month, down $108 billion in December alone and by $513 billion overall last year.

That suggests an accelerating outflow of money from China which may largely be the result of the opening up of its financial markets over the past year, but also a sign that the world’s second-largest economy is in deepening trouble.

Michael Every, Rabobank’s Head of Markets Research, Asia-Pacific, said once Beijing had won the diplomatic triumph of getting the yuan included in the International Monetary Fund’s reserve currency basket in November, he expected policymakers would let it slip to cope with a slowing, deflationary economy.

“Why people are panicked is because (i) they didn’t see this coming, and/or (ii) the global economy needs a consumer of last resort, and China is sending a signal that they won’t be it,” he added.

A sustained depreciation in the yuan puts pressure on other Asian countries to weaken their currencies and makes commodities denominated in U.S. dollars more expensive for Chinese buyers, which could further depress demand and commodity prices.

Shanghai stocks slid 7.3 percent to trigger the halt in trading, a repeat performance of Monday’s sudden tumble. Japan’s Nikkei shed 2.3 percent in sympathy, and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index was down 2.8 percent.

The halt mechanism, intended to calm market volatility, was instead “killing investors” and creating panic, a retail investor in Guangzhou complained.

China’s securities regulator also unveiled new rules on Thursday to restrict selling by big shareholders who have been locked into their holdings for six months since Beijing banned them from offloading stocks to arrest a summer market crash.

In rules that take effect on Jan. 9, they can’t sell more than 1 percent of a listed company’s share capital every three months.

“This is crazy,” said Alberto Forchielli, founder of Mandarin Capital Partners. “Chinese regulators set off on this path in July and they cannot get out of it. They have ruined whatever hope investors still had in the market.”

(Reporting by Lu Jianxin, Lee Chyen Yee and Samuel Shen in Shanghai and Patrick Graham in London; Additional reporting by Lisa Jucca and Masayuki Kitano; Writing by Wayne Cole and Will Waterman; Editing by Ruth Pitchford)

Dow off to worst January start ever as China fears grow

By Caroline Valetkevitch

(Reuters) – U.S. stocks sold off further on Thursday, giving the Dow its worst start to a year since the 30-stock index was created in 1928, dragged down by another drop in Chinese equities and oil prices at 12-year lows.

China allowed the biggest fall in the yuan currency in five months, adding to investor fears about the health of its economy, while Shanghai stocks <.SSEC> were halted for the second time this week after another steep selloff.

Oil prices fell to 12-year lows and copper prices touched their lowest since 2009, weighing on energy and materials shares. Shares of Freeport McMoran <FCX.N> dropped 9.1 percent to $5.61. All 10 S&P 500 sectors ended in the red, though, and the Nasdaq Biotech index <.NBI> fell 4.1 percent.

“People see the weakness in China and in the overall equity market and think there’s going to be an impact on corporations here in the United States,” said Robert Pavlik, chief market strategist at Boston Private Wealth in New York.

“When you have a market that begins a year with weakness, people are sort of suspect anyway. The economy isn’t moving all that well, the outlook is modest at best, and they don’t want to wait for the long term. China creates more uncertainty.”

The Dow Jones industrial average <.DJI> closed down 392.41 points, or 2.32 percent, to 16,514.1, the S&P 500 <.SPX> had lost 47.17 points, or 2.37 percent, to 1,943.09 and the Nasdaq Composite <.IXIC> had dropped 146.34 points, or 3.03 percent, to 4,689.43.

The Dow has lost 5.2 percent since the end of 2015 in the worst first four trading days since the 30-stock index’s creation.

Stocks extended declines late in the session, and the CBOE Volatility Index <.VIX>, the market’s favored gauge of Wall Street anxiety, ended up 21.4 percent at 24.99, its highest since Sept. 29.

Investors also braced for Friday’s U.S. government jobs report, which could show how well-insulated the U.S. economy is from international stresses.

Billionaire investor George Soros, speaking at an economic forum in Sri Lanka, drew similarities between the present environment and the financial crash of 2008. He said global markets were facing a crisis and investors needed to be very cautious, Bloomberg reported.

Apple, which generates a lot of its business in China and is still the most valuable U.S. company, fell 4.2 percent to its lowest level since the August market swoon.

Yahoo <YHOO.O> fell 6.2 percent to $30.16 after Business Insider reported the company was working on a plan to cut its workforce by at least 10 percent. Alibaba <BABA.N>, in which Yahoo has a stake, was down 6 percent at $72.72.

Volume has been heavy this week. About 9.9 billion shares changed hands on U.S. exchanges Thursday, well above the 7.2 billion daily average for the past 20 trading days, according to Thomson Reuters data.

Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by 2,704 to 415, for a 6.52-to-1 ratio on the downside; on the Nasdaq, 2,492 issues fell and 390 advanced for a 6.39-to-1 ratio favoring decliners.

The S&P 500 posted 1 new 52-week highs and 82 new lows; the Nasdaq recorded 16 new highs and 302 new lows.

(Additional reporting by Tanya Agrawal and Saqib Iqbal Ahmed; Editing by Saumyadeb Chakrabarty and Nick Zieminski)

Global stocks, oil tumble as China economy concerns mount

By Rodrigo Campos

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Shares on major exchanges fell for a sixth straight day on Thursday and crude oil prices touched multi-year lows as investors fretted over the state of China’s economy and its ability to stabilize its stock market.

In a move that deepened concerns over China’s economic health, the People’s Bank of China set the yuan midpoint rate lower for an eighth consecutive day. The 0.5 percent decline was the biggest between daily fixings since August.

China suspended a circuit breaker implemented at the start of 2016 that stopped trading for the day when the benchmark index fell 7 percent, a halt already triggered twice this week. Analysts and investors said the mechanism, put in place to avoid market volatility, may have backfired.

“People see the weakness in China and in the overall equity market and think there’s going to be an impact on corporations here in the United States,” said Robert Pavlik, chief market strategist at Boston Private Wealth in New York.

Rounding out its worst four-day start to a year in more than a century, the Dow Jones industrial average <.DJI> fell 392.41 points, or 2.32 percent, to 16,514.1.

The S&P 500 <.SPX> lost 47.17 points, or 2.37 percent, to 1,943.09 and the Nasdaq Composite <.IXIC> dropped 146.34 points, or 3.03 percent, to 4,689.43.

A gauge of major stock markets globally <.MIWD00000PUS> fell 2.2 percent and Nikkei futures <NKc1> were down 2.6 percent.

CURRENCY WAR BREWING

Investors fear China’s economy is even weaker than had been imagined, with Beijing, in a bid to help exporters, allowing the yuan’s depreciation to accelerate. The move risks triggering a cycle of competitive devaluation, said Mexican Finance Minister Luis Videgaray.

The U.S. dollar tumbled 0.9 percent against a basket of currencies <.DXY>, losing 1.4 percent to $1.0929 versus the euro <EUR=> and 0.7 percent to the yen <JPY=> at 117.63.

Brent crude cut a loss of more than 6 percent to trade down 1.6 percent, while U.S. crude <CLc1>, down as much as 5.5 percent earlier, was down 2.3 percent.

The benchmark U.S. Treasury yield <US10YT=RR> touched its lowest since late October. U.S. 10-year Treasury notes were last up 8/32 in price to yield 2.1491 percent, from 2.177 percent late on Wednesday.

Gold touched $1,110 an ounce for the first time in nine weeks as the dollar fell and investors rushed into perceived havens. Spot gold <XAU=> rose 1.35 percent to $1,109.10 an ounce. Its 4.6 percent gain up to Thursday was the best four-day run for gold in a year.

Copper prices <CMCU3> touched a low not seen since May 2009.

(Reporting by Rodrigo Campos, additional reporting by Caroline Valetkevitch; Editing by Nick Zieminski, Meredith Mazzilli and Dan Grebler)