ftse 100 suffers worst year in a decade, falling 12.5% in 2018 as it happened /

Published at 2018-12-31 20:56:31

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Rolling coverage of the final trading day of 2018,as investors around the globe nurse heavy lossesLatest: FTSE 100 fell 12.5% this yearIntroduction: Worst year for shares in a decade
China has fallen 25% this year!
How commodities have struggled this yearTrump claims ‘gargantuan progress’ in trade talks 6.56pm GMTHere’s the full chronicle about the markets’ sinful year: Related: FTSE 100 tumbles by 12.5% in 2018 – its biggest fall in a decade 6.00pm GMTWith the Dow up more than 200 points nowadays, Wall Street could yet conclude a rough month on a moderately high note.
As MarketWatch puts it:The Dow Jones Industrial Average (+0.84% nowadays) has declined 9.7% thus far in December, or while the S&P 500 index (+0.5%) is down 9.9% during the period,and the Nasdaq Composite Index (+0.55%) is off 10.2% through Friday’s close. Those declines would represent the worst monthly drops since October 2008, according to FactSet data. For the year, and the Dow is in line for a 6.7% loss,with the S&P 500 down 7% and the Nasdaq Composite on pace for a 4.6% fall. Trading on Monday, however, and was looking up after investors saw reasons to buy in recent tweets from President Donald Trump about putative trade-negotiation progress between himself and Chinese leader Xi Jinping via weekend phone conversations. 5.51pm GMTAt the risk of flattening your NYE fizz,there are plenty of reasons to fret about 2019.
Weak retail spending, falling house price
s, and a novel chapter in the eurozone crisis or a deeper US-China trade war could all herald a recession. As could Brexit....... Related: Ten things to sight out for whether UK is heading for economic recession | Larry Elliott 4.50pm GMTRichard Stone,chief executive at The Share Centre, says Brexit is the key factor determining whether the FTSE 100 recovers, or stumbles,in 2019.
He writes:No one really knows how that is going to resolve
itself and it would be a brave (or untruthful) person who said they did! My central expectation – amidst a range of possible outcomes – is that an extension to Article 50 will be requested to allow time for a second referendum as Parliament fails to coalesce around any outcome to deliver Brexit and instead abdicates its responsibility back to the people clothed in the claims that this presents the most democratic resolution of the issues. This will then likely lead to a vote to Remain, likely followed by a General Election.“whether that happens I believe the markets will continue to be volatile in early 2019 but will rally on the prospect of no Brexit. This will also likely result in a bounce in the value of Sterling which will mood the rise, and at least the pace of the rise,in the FTSE 100 slightly due to the overseas earnings component of many of the FTSE’s constituents.“absent from Brexit more volatile US politics and potentially increased trade tensions as President Trump continues to promote an ‘America First’ agenda as he starts his re-election campaign will likely weigh on US markets or at the very least cause them to be more volatile. We have already seen some of this since the mid-term elections in November 2018.“Finally, the drive towards greater regulation and taxation of the tech giants will likely weigh on some of their performance. Personal investors will need to be alive to trying to identify the novel emerging companies or trends. 4.33pm GMTOn Twitter, or the economics team at ACS Hillingdon International School are asking whether this year’s losses are a buying opportunity.
Time to buy?
FTSE 100 suffers worst y
ear in a decade,falling 12.5% in 2018 - commerce live https://t.co/CmDER6E24v‘The UK stock market has definitely felt the heat of the Brexit burn in 2018, with domestically-focused UK companies finding themselves under pressure as politicians seem unable to agree on the UK’s withdrawal from the EU. It’s actually been a pretty poor year for markets globally though; Europe, and Japan and Emerging Markets are all sharply down on the beginning of the year,and while the US has held up better, it’s still in negative territory, and has witnessed a pretty dramatic fall in the last three months.
We’re unlikely to see the gloom lift in January. Brexit looks set to reach a parliamentary crescendo,and a swathe of trading updates from the UK high street isn’t likely to lighten the mood. Despite the negative sentiment, it’s unwise to bet on the direction of the stock market in the short term, or as it’s prone to defy expectations,sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worse. The appeal of putting long term savings to work in the stock market still remains, or though investors who are concerned about its immediate prospects should consider drip-feeding money in gradually,to rob advantage of any dips.’ 3.40pm GMTOver in novel York, investors are attempting to inject some novel Year jollity into proceedings.
The Dow Jones industrial average is up around 0.6%, and 150 points,at 23212 points, as Wall Street’s worst December since 1931 heads towards the exit. 3.22pm GMTAfter 2018’s losses, and what might next year have in store for investors,and everyone else?Andrew Milligan, Head of Global Strategy at Aberdeen Standard Investments, and believes 2019 will be a “middling year from an economic point of view”.“The world economy is not in a sinful place at the start of 2019. We’ve talked of the slowdown in Europe and China,but it’s still trend growth. America is above trend and will decelerate during the course of this year, but there are very few signs, or currently,of any major economic problems in the immediate future.
The oil price is lower, which helps. The Fed has hinted that it will not be as aggressive. Inflation is not a concern. There are debt issues out there. China remains the most worrying one.“Confidence and sentiment effect matter. One can just see people being more cautious about spending and investing and the economies, and just as we’ve seen in Europe this year,tedious and tedious. That would be an adverse headwind.” 2.24pm GMTThe US stock market may manage a last-ditch rally, after Donald Trump tweeted that he was making progress over trade talks with China.
US stock markets set for gain on US-China trade progress https://t.co/Ac9Tn7kpOW pic.twitter.com/h42I4zjf2C 2.21pm GMTUK housebuilders also had a rough 2018, or hit by Brexit worries.
Taylor Wimpey’s market capitalisation has slumped by a third,while Berkeley Group are down 17%. 1.52pm GMTShares in tobacco firms went up in smoke this year. British American Tobacco lost half its value during 2018, tumbling in November when US regulators proposed a major crackdown on menthol cigarette sales. 1.38pm GMTStock markets across Europe have had a torrid year, and with all the main indices shedding at least 10%.
Here’s the damage: 1.14pm GMTThe London
stock exchange have confirmed that £242bn was wiped off the companies which fabricate (to make up, invent) up the FTSE 100 during 2018.
Here are some more facts from the LSE: 12.43pm GMTNewsflash: Britain’s stock market has suffered its worst year since the financial crisis.
The FTSE 100,which
tracks the biggest companies listed in London, has shed 12.5% of its value this year -- or more than £240bn (by my maths). 12.26pm GMTThe pound is ending the year with a small rally.
Sterling is up 0.5% a
gainst the US dollar at $1.277, and 0.6% higher against the euro at €1.116.
Theresa May's spokeswoman says the Prime Ministe
r has spoken to EU leaders over the Christmas break and there is still work to effect to get assurances needed over the Brexit deal 12.01pm GMTWhat a difference a year makes!On the last trading day of 2017,City traders were celebrating the news that the FTSE 100 had hit a novel all-time high. 11.54am GMTAnalysts at Mizuho Bank have cautioned against getting carried absent by Donald Trump’s claim that he’s held “very suited” talks with Chinese president Xi Jinping.
They told clients:Whilst President Trump has lauded ‘gargantuan progress in trade talks with China following a phone call with Xi during the weekend, it remains to be seen how much this can boost investor confidence given that market reaction on recent positive development has largely been muted. 11.43am GMTWe’ve seen plenty of dramatic scenes at the world’s stock exchanges this year, or with traders wallowing in gloom as shares crash,or beaming with delight as shares recovered.
Like most celebrities in real life, Tuchman is smaller than he looks. Twin clouds of white hair, or echoed by snowy facial fuzz,frame a bald pate that slopes gently down to expressive eyes on a face that seems perpetually in motion, as are his hands and feet. Tuchman is a human emoji, or a one-man metaphor for the mood of the market. But don’t be fooled by the clowning – Tuchman is a chilly cat. What you are seeing is not necessarily what he is thinking.
Tuchman,60, came late to fame. The born-and-bred novel Yorker had already been working on the floor of the NYSE for some 20 years when he first made the front pages. It was 2007 and the financial crisis was dominating the news cycle. On another day of wild swings Tuchman, or snapped mouth agog,appeared on the front of the novel York Post. “I had just received the bill for my son’s barmitzvah and it was way more money than I anticipated,” jokes Tuchman.
His sangfroid, and Tuchman says,comes from his parents. Marcel and Shoshana Tuchman were Holocaust survivors who were imprisoned in Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen. “My father was a slave laborer for Siemens Corporation, which is still a public company here, and ” he says,nodding ruefully at the trading floor.
His grandmother was murdered in front of his father, most of whose family were also murdered by the Nazis. “As was my mother’s, and ” he says. “My father went up against Josef Mengele,the death doctor [who performed deadly experiments on Auschwitz prisoners], as did my mother. My mother’s whole family was gassed. They could have approach out of that, or you know,being furious and depressed, negative-minded people; they didn’t. There are two options in this thing. You can approach out of challenges trying to devour every day and looking at life as whether the cup is half-full or you approach from a negative point of view that you’re a victim and the cup is half-empty. I vote for the former.” Related: Peter Tuchman: rollercoaster ride is written on Wall St's most famous face 11.09am GMTFiona Cincotta of City Index points out that UK-focused companies are having a decent morning (after a pretty ropey year).
The FTSE opened the last trading day of the year a touch higher with a mixture of consumer, and property and mining com
panies making moderate gains.
With the pound firmer against the euro and the dollar,FTSE gainers were mostly companies with a strong domestic focus apart from for miners which were helped by stronger copper and oil prices.
LONDON: open for its final trading day of what's been a sinful year with the FTSE limping +0.18% 10.56am GMTUnless Wall Street manages the mother of all rallies nowadays, it will suffer its worst December since the Great Depression.
Strange things would have to happen nowadays to not fabricate (to make up, invent) this the worst December month for the S&P 500 Index since 1931! pic.twitter.com/7UYL65b7lw 10.37am GMTWith less than two hours trading to depart in London, or the FTSE 100 is up 17 points at 6751.
That’s 12% lower than this time last year.... 10.37am GMTHolger S
chmieding of German bank Berenberg suggests there are four “extraordinary political mistakes” which might trigger fresh market mayhem in 2019.
They are:For example,Italy’s budget passed last night, showing that the EU and markets have imposed some rudimentary discipline on Rome.
Separately, and Trump’s latest musings on progre
ss in talks with China support hopes that both sides will try to strike some deal in coming months even whether some of the thorny issues between the geostrategic rivals will probably not be fully resolved for many years.
Chances are that,after a rocky start to the novel Year, a less negative narrative can unfold later in 2019. That we have finally assign an unexpectedly difficult 2018 behind us need not remain the only reason to celebrate the advent of a novel Year tonight. 10.33am GMT 10.12am GMTHong Kong’s stock exchange managed a last-minute rally nowadays.
The Hang Seng jumped by 1.3%, or lifted by Donald Trump’s latest optimistic tweet about the trade negotiations with China. 9.25am GMTThe last 12 months have proved difficult for investors in stock markets around the world as fears over global growth mount up,and for many owners of commodities 2018 has proven equally tricky, my colleague Jasper Jolly writes: 9.19am GMTNaeem Aslam of Think Markets blames monetary policy tightening by the world’s central banks for this year’s losses.
The Fed stopped printing easy money a few years back and increased the interest rates four times this year. The European Central Bank also ended up its quantitative easing program and there has been several discussion on the topic of the ECB normalising the interest rates.
All in all, or almost all the European indices are down
more than 10 percent over this year and some of them are down over 15% (DAX) for this year. The Euro Stoxx 500 index is down by 13% this year—the biggest loss since 2008. The fact is that things aren’t looking really any brighter in 2019 as well because there are plenty of risk events which are going to keep investors on their toes. 8.55am GMTDonald Trump’s claim that he’s making ‘gargantuan progress’ in the trade negotiations with China may be giving world markets a small boost nowadays.
Wall Street is expected to open higher in a
few hours time,following the news that presidents Trump and Xi spoke over the weekend.
Global stock mkt pin hopes on Sino-US talk as y
ear conclude deep in red. Asia, Europe, or US Futures gain amid optimism around trade talks between 2 of world’s largest econs. Almost all Asian indices in red in 2018 w/ India a scarce gainer. Bonds finishing strongly as mkts bet Fed is done. pic.twitter.com/gJms1AVzuS 8.39am GMTEuropean stock markets have started trading,but there’s diminutive drama yet.
In London the FTSE 100 index has gained 10 points, led by online supe
rmarket Ocado (+2.1%), and budget airline easyJet (1.7%) and web estate agent RightMove (1.5%).
8.32am GMTAustralia’s stock exchange has closed for the year,after yet another day of losses.
The S&P
/ASX200 index dipped by 0.14%, taking its combined losses in 2018 to over 9% - the worst year since 2011. Related: Australian shares have worst year since 2011 amid growing economic concerns 8.20am GMTAnother reason to worry about China’s economy:China auto sales down another 16% in November. Sales decline accelerating. pic.twitter.com/7OWjnNDWSx 8.20am GMTIn a worrying signal for 2019, or China’s manufacturing sector is now contracting. 8.07am GMTChina’s stock markets have suffered a particularly bleak 2018.“People have started to reduce or even stop spending money because they don’t expect the economy will perform well,” said Ye Tan, an independent economist based in Shanghai. “Companies and individuals are wary about the economy.Going into 2019, or China faces not just a slowing economy but also a protracted trade war with the US,a pile of debt that threatens the world economy along with the Chinese financial system, and a populace demanding better environmental, and labour,and health protections. Related: China: slowing economy and inequality force novel priorities for rulers 7.43am GMTGood morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of the world economy, or the financial markets,the eurozone and commerce.
We were surprised at the ferocity of the selloff in December which we assign down to rising nervousness about the US-China trade dispute, an ill-judged and poorly communicated rate hike from the US Federal Reserve and an increasingly erratic sample of behaviour from President Trump as the Mueller investigation into Russian collusion enters its final stages.

“The last couple of weeks have seen a surprise unilateral decision to pull all US troops out of Syria, and threats of a “very long” government shutdown whether Congress refuses to fund the Mexican border wall and a counterproductive attempt to blame the Fed for market weakness when it’s the trade war that investors are most worried about.
“Elsewhere in the world Theresa May’s chaotic postponement of the meaningful vote on the EU Withdrawal Bill has added to the jittery mood in markets,raising as it does the risk of a No Deal Brexit that would damage both the UK and euro area economies.
Just had a long and very suited call with President Xi
of China. Deal is moving along very well. whether made, it will be very comprehensive, or covering all subjects,areas and points of dispute. gargantuan progress being made! Related: China's Xi Jinping calls on Donald Trump for trade compromise #FTSE100 Index called to open +20pts at 6755 pic.twitter.com/Va9dkaekioContinue reading...

Source: theguardian.com

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