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European markets bow to China-US tensions

Frankfurt shows the heaviest losses with a drop of 2.02%. Milan gives up 1.88%, Paris 1.54%, London 1.41% and Madrid 1.22%. In Zurich, the SMI dropped 1.63%.

The equity markets were shaken Friday by a new episode of tension between the United States and China, which relegated to the background a positive indicator on economic activity in Europe.

At the close, the Euro Stoxx 50, the benchmark index for the euro area markets lost 1.80% despite the publication of an indicator showing the rebound in private activity in July in the euro area.

At the end of the day, Frankfurt suffered the heaviest losses with a drop of 2.02%. Milan lost 1.88%, Paris 1.54%, London 1.41% and Madrid 1.22%. In Zurich, the SMI sold 1.63%.

Chinese stock markets also ended sharply lower. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng composite index closed down 2.19%, the Shanghai Stock Exchange plunged 3.9% and the Shenzhen Stock Exchange 5%. The Tokyo Stock Exchange has been closed since Thursday due to public holidays.

In the United States, Wall Street was moving down when the European stock markets closed: at 6.30 p.m. (4.30 p.m. GMT), its flagship index, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, lost 0.53%, the extended S&P 500 index 0.65% and the Nasdaq, with strong technological coloring, continued its bad period by falling by 0.95%.

“The situation has continued to deteriorate recently between the United States and China,” summarizes David Madden, analyst at CMC Markets.

Beijing on Friday ordered the closure of the United States consulate in the large city of Chengdu (southwest), three days after the American decision to close the Chinese consulate in Houston considered by Washington as “a hub of espionage” Chinese and American “intellectual property theft”.

This “escalation of tensions between China and the United States, which could have enormous negative consequences on the stock market, is worrying,” said Stephen Innes, strategist at AxiCorp.

Sino-U.S. Tensions, already fueled by trade disputes and accusations over the origin of COVID-19, had escalated in recent weeks with Beijing’s imposition of a national security law in Hong Kong .

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Thursday called on “the free world” to “triumph” over the “new tyranny” embodied, according to him, by Communist China.

The rest of the news has hardly helped to counteract this trend: the Covid-19 pandemic is still poorly controlled in the United States, while the WHO said it was “worried” on Friday about the resurgence of the disease. epidemic in several European countries.

On Thursday, a rebound in new claims for unemployment benefits in the world’s largest economy weighed on the indices.

“Faced with this deterioration in the economic situation, there is no doubt that American parliamentarians will have to quickly vote for new measures to support household incomes”, estimate the experts at Aurel BGC.

At the same time, on the Old Continent, growth in private activity in the euro area increased in July, for the first time since February, even reaching its highest level in two years, according to the first estimate on Friday from the composite PMI index from the firm Markit.

The PMI activity indices in France and the United Kingdom also rose at a strong pace.

The return of risk aversion was little reflected in bond yields, however, and rates in France, Germany and Spain rose slightly.

On the value side, the technology sector has been struggling, in the wake of the Nasdaq: in Germany, SAP lost 3.73% to 157.67 euros), Infineon 3.70% to 25.33 euros. In France, Wordline sold 4.97% to 73.74 euros and STMicroelectronics 2.71% to 25.89 euros.

Values ​​have benefited from the rise in gold prices this week, which are heading towards all-time highs, with the precious metal acting as a safe haven. In London, Fresnillo took 0.21% to 1,191.50 pence.

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