North Korea crisis: Global markets slide as tensions between Donald Trump and Pyongyang remain high

The miner-heavy FTSE underperformed and was down 0.8 per cent on Friday

Friday 11 August 2017 08:55 BST
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Stock market graph on a computer monitor
Stock market graph on a computer monitor (Getty/iStock)

A sell-off among heavyweight basic resources stocks heightened the third day of losses for European shares and put them on track for their worst week this year as ratcheting political tensions dented equities worldwide.

The pan-European STOXX 600 fell 0.7 per cent, taking its weekly losses to 2.4 percent, its worst since early November last year.

Euro zone stocks and blue-chips also dropped 0.7 per cent, while the miner-heavy FTSE underperformed and was down 0.8 per cent.

​Eurostoxx volatility, the main European gauge of equity investor anxiety, jumped to a near four-month high, though it remained near historically depressed levels.

Asian and US equity markets had extended their sell-off overnight as a war of words between the US and North Korea intensified.

On Friday basic resource stocks dropped 2.6 percent to a month low as Chinese base metal prices collapsed as political pressures took their toll.

Rio Tinto, Glencore, Antofagasta, Anglo American, BHP Billitonand Arcelormittal all fell 2.3 to 4.1 percent.

Falling crude prices made oil & gas stocks a weight too, dropping 1 percent with Tullow Oil the top faller.

Banks also fell 0.9 per cent, putting the index on track for its worst week in nine months.

UK mid-cap Dixons Carphone was the worst-performing on the STOXX, falling 7.6 percent after a top-rated Exane BNP Paribas analyst cut the retailer by two notches to “underperform”, citing concerns about its mobile business.

The probability of a market correction is increasing, HSBC's European equity strategists said. The MSCI Europe index has enjoyed a 406-day run of near uninterrupted gains, which they said was its second-longest stretch in the post-crisis bull market.

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