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US stocks dip following dovish signals from Bank of Japan and poor bond auction
Stocks rebounded somewhat on Tuesday, but many analysts expect more effects from the unwinding, extending a period of volatility. — Reuters pic

NEW YORK, Aug 8 — Wall Street stocks finished lower yesterday after a rally that lifted European and Asian bourses petered out amid lingering unease following recent turbulence.

Major US indices began the session solidly higher following a trend in Paris, Frankfurt, Tokyo and other exchanges as the Bank of Japan issued a dovish signal it will not further hike interest rates amidst market volatility.

But the S&P 500 and other major US indices tumbled into the red after midday, with analysts pointing to a poorly received US Treasury bond auction as a catalyst for further selling after Monday’s rout.

"This is what happens when you have a big risk-off type of event,” Steve Sosnick, of Interactive Brokers, said of Monday’s equity market plunge. "It’s normal to see the market display uncertainty.”

Major Wall Street indices sank more than 2.5 per cent on Monday amid worries over a potential US recession and the unwinding of the so-called "carry trade” that took advantage of the weak yen prior to last week’s interest rate hike by the Bank of Japan.

Stocks rebounded somewhat on Tuesday, but many analysts expect more effects from the unwinding, extending a period of volatility.

"This volatility is typical of more prolonged and chaotic market downturns, which could prompt investors to adopt a cautious stance, hold on tight, and keep the antacids ready,” said independent analyst Stephen Innes.

BoJ deputy governor Shinichi Uchida earlier yesterday sought to allay fears of further interest rate hikes, indicating that the central bank would not raise them further during a period of high market volatility.

This dovish signal on rates sparked a nearly 2 per cent drop in the yen, while the Tokyo stock market closed up 1.2 per cent.

The retreat in the yen "should take some pressure off those still exposed to the yen carry-trade, of which there are still significant numbers,” said Trade Nation analyst David Morrison.

Elsewhere, Oil prices climbed more than 2 per cent on Middle East tensions, supply constraints in Libya and weekly data pointing to a drop in US crude inventories.

Among individual companies, Disney fell 4.5 per cent despite reporting better than expected earnings as investors digested commentary that a weakening of demand in the parks business "could impact the next few quarters.”

Airbnb slumped 13.4 per cent after reporting lower than expected profits and cautioning of "some signs of slowing demand from US guests.” — AFP

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