European stocks drop as Omicron fears keep markets on edge

Investors also bet on faster Fed tapering

European stock indexes opened lower on Thursday, reversing gains from the previous session as a lack of information about the Omicron variant of Covid-19 left markets volatile, and as investors also bet on faster Fed tapering.

Markets first dropped on fears over the Omicron variant on Friday last week, and since then have see-sawed as investors weighed up the possible impact of countries imposing new travel restrictions, amid signs that the new strain may be more contagious than previous variants.

On Wednesday, US stocks started to bounce back but then fell after the first US case of the variant was confirmed.

The key information investors are waiting for is whether the spread of the virus translates into higher hospitalisations, and any comments from vaccine-makers on how well vaccines work against this variant.

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At 0849 GMT, the MSCI world equity index, which tracks shares in 50 countries, was down 0.2 per cent on the day, having touched its lowest in 18 days.

Europe's Stoxx 600 was down 1.1 per cent, mostly erasing gains from its recovery in the previous session as Europe caught up with Wall Street's latest move lower. But the index was still above the low it reached on Tuesday.

Wall Street futures pointed to some recovery later in the session, with S&P 500 e-minis up 0.6 per cent.

Bond-buying programme

Also weighing on stock markets, and flattening the US yield curve, were remarks by Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell, who said that he would consider a faster end to the Fed's bond-buying programme, which could open the door to earlier interest rate hikes.

In his second day of testimony in Congress on Wednesday, Mr Powell reiterated that the US central bank needs to be ready to respond to the possibility that inflation does not recede in the second half of next year.

“In this past what we’ve seen is central banks using Covid as an excuse to remain dovish, and what we’re seeing is central banks turn hawkish despite rising concerns around Covid, so it is a bit of a shift in communication,” said Mohammed Kazmi, portfolio manager at UBP.

Long-term US Treasury yields neared their lowest in a year late on Wednesday, with the US 30-year yield touching its lowest since early January, as investors bet that early rate hikes would curb inflation.

The Omicron variant also hurt risk appetite, making the safe-haven bonds more attractive to investors, pushing yields down – although yields picked up again in early European trading.

Volatility in equity markets as measured by the Vix, known as Wall Street’s “fear index”, hit its highest since February on Wednesday, before easing on Friday.

Currency market volatility also rose, with euro-dollar one-month volatility gauges below Monday’s one-year peak but still at elevate levels.

“Liquidity in some areas of the market is still quite poor as people grapple with this news and as we head towards year-end, a lot of it is really liquidity driven, which is leading to some volatility,” said UBP’s Kazmi.

“Even in the most liquid market of the US treasury market we’ve seen some fairly large moves on very little newsflow at times.”

The dollar index was steady, at 96.02, while the euro was little changed at $1.13225.

The Australian dollar, which is seen as a liquid proxy for risk appetite, was flat at $0.711.

Oil prices recovered somewhat from the previous session's lows, with Brent crude futures at $69.75 a barrel and US West Texas Intermediate crude futures at $66.47.