Banking stocks dropped and the dollar slipped on Wednesday as doubts
over tax cuts and bond market moves hurt profitability and raised
questions over the longevity of the current expansion in the United
States.
In the European session, the two main banking indices
suffered the most, falling 1.1 percent .SX7E and 0.9 percent .SX7P
respectively, dragging an index of pan-European stocks lower 0.2
percent.
European banking stocks were the worst performing
sector as share indexes across the continent opened lower, following a
poor session for U.S. banks.
The dollar
edged lower against a basket of currencies .DXY, hurt by a media report
that suggested the implementation of a centrepiece corporate tax cut
under discussion in U.S. tax reforms plans could be delayed.
Derek
Halpenny, head of global markets research at Mitsubishi UFJ in London,
said he was dubious over the progress of the tax cuts programme being
urged by U.S. President Donald Trump’s campaign.
Francois
Savary, chief investment officer at Prime Partners, said the doubts
over the tax issue reinforce the case for some consolidation in the
market, which has been fully priced for good news.
Overnight, Goldman Sachs (GS.N) shares lost 1.51 percent and weighed the most on the main stock index.
This
came after the U.S. 2-to-10-year Treasury yield curve hit its flattest
in a decade, potentially cutting into the profits of banks, which borrow
money at short-term interest rates in order to lend it out at longer
terms. US2YT=RR US10YT=RR
Such a move can also imply that investors are expecting a slowdown.
European
bonds were also snared by this yield curve flattening phenomenon, with
yields on long-term German bonds falling to two-month lows on Wednesday.
Analysts
believe that a flattening yield curve at a time when the Federal
Reserve is hiking rates is a sign that investors are concerned over the
sustainability of economic growth and inflation in the world’s biggest
economy.

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