By Huw Jones
LONDON (Reuters) – Wall Street headed for a steadier start on Friday after losses in Europe and Asia as euro zone inflation jumped to a 13-year high, fuelling a debate over the timing of interest rate rises against a backdrop of patchier global growth.
U.S. shares looked steadier after falling on Thursday, helping European shares pare earlier losses. U.S. stock futures pointed to a slightly firmer open.
All eyes are now on U.S. consumer spending, inflation and factory activity data later in the day for signs of economic health and clues regarding the Federal Reserve’s timeline for tapering its asset purchases and hiking key interest rates.
On the first day of October, the month for some of history’s most infamous market routs, the STOXX index of 600 European companies initially fell sharply, hitting its weakest level since mid-July, before recovering most lost ground. It was off 0.15% at 1149 GMT.
The MSCI’s gauge of stocks across the globe shed 0.2%, its longest daily losing streak since last February.
With stellar economic growth figures now in the rear view mirror, markets were looking ugly going into October, Michael Hewson, chief markets analyst at CMC Markets, said.
“There is a sense that with October’s reputation, worries about surging energy prices, supply chain disruptions, concerns about inflation and power shortages, October could be a fairly windy affair,” Hewson said.
Consumer price inflation in the 19 countries sharing the euro accelerated to 3.4% year on year in September, from 3% a month earlier, the highest reading since the height of the global financial crisis in September 2008.
So far, central bankers have insisted that rises in inflation are temporary.
“We think there are high chances that this inflation is less transitory than all central banks, including the European Central Bank, are suggesting,” BNP Paribas economist Luigi Speranza said.
Data overnight showed that Asia’s manufacturing activity broadly stagnated in September as signs of slowing Chinese growth weighed on the region’s economies, weighing on Asian shares.
DOLLAR, TREASURIES PERKY
The dollar, however, began the last quarter of 2021 near its highest levels of the year, and heading for its best week since June as currency markets braced for U.S. interest rates to rise before those of major peers.
The dollar index, which measures the currency against six major rivals, was off Thursday’s one-year high of 94.504, last changing hands at 94.081.
Meanwhile, the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury yields are up for a sixth straight week, trading at 1.4875%.
Japan’s Nikkei tumbled 2.3% to the lowest level since Sept. 3. An MSCI index of Asia-Pacific stocks slid 1.22% to its lowest since Aug. 24.
Chinese markets are closed for a week from Friday for the Golden Week holiday.
“You can argue whether it’s really stagflation or not, but the whole growth-inflation backdrop seems to have just tilted to a less favorable one,” said Rob Carnell, Asia-Pacific head of research at ING in Singapore.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said on Wednesday that resolving “tension” between high inflation and high unemployment is the Fed’s most urgent issue, acknowledging a potential conflict between the U.S. central bank’s two goals of stable prices and full employment.
The latest clues on the Fed’s policy normalisation path come with U.S. personal spending and core consumption deflator data later in the day.
Crude prices continued to ease after Brent topped $80 a barrel earlier in the week for the first time in three years.
Brent crude futures slipped 0.13% to $78.20 a barrel, while U.S. crude futures fell 0.3% to $74.78.
Gold, despite being traditionally an inflation hedge and safe haven, eased 0.17% to $1,753 an ounce, following Thursday’s 1.77% surge, the biggest since March.
(Reporting by Kevin Buckland; Editing by Alexander Smith and Chizu Nomiyama)
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