Stocks sink as sentiment on global outlook sours

Stocks sink as sentiment on global outlook sours
<p><p>U.S. stocks followed equities in Europe and Asia lower on Wednesday amid growing pessimism over the global outlook.</p></p><p><p>The S&amp;P 500 fell 0.5% as debt limit talks hit a fresh impasse. Negotiations are still far apart on key issues, rising the risk of a U.S. default and resulting recession.</p></p><p><p>In Europe, the Stoxx 600 also slid the most in two months as U.K. inflation came in higher than expected.</p></p><p><p>And in Asia, the CSI 300 fell more than 1% as a new wave of Covid was threatening to set back China&#8217;s economy.</p></p><p><p>Luxury stocks including LVMH and Gucci owner Kering extended losses.</p></p><p><p>Analog Devices slid after a weak outlook on economic uncertainty. And Citigroup fell after abandoning plans to sell its Mexican unit Banamex.</p></p><p><p>Yields on short-dated Treasurys continued to push higher Wednesday, with investors demanding a higher premium on U.S. debt with the highest risk of default if politicians are unable to come to an agreement on the debt ceiling.</p></p><p><p>The yield on securities maturing June 6 pushed further above 6.1% while those maturing May 30 are yielding around 3%.</p></p><p><p>Minutes later in the day from the Federal Reserve&#8217;s FOMC meeting in May are expected to reveal concern over credit conditions, which may prompt the U.S. central bank to pause its interest rate hikes in June.</p></p><p><p>&#8220;We are pessimistic on the economic outlook,&#8221; said Michael Krautzberger, head of EMEA fundamental fixed income at BlackRock International.</p></p><p><p>&#8220;The potential volatility coming from the debt ceiling discussion as we approach the deadline is one of those reasons. We don&#8217;t expect a technical default but we do expect a last minute deal.&#8221;</p></p><p><p>There has been a wall of worry investors have had to climb, but Nomura&#8217;s Charlie McElligott said he believes a &#8220;positive outcome&#8221; is getting closer ahead of the treasury secretary&#8217;s imposed deadline for when the U.S. will start to miss debt payments.</p></p><p><p>&#8220;Any relief rally on a debt ceiling &#8216;deal&#8217; headline into the start of next week then has the potential to act as a local top for stocks for a bit, with most of the &#8216;wall of worry&#8217; blood already squeezed from the stone,&#8221; McElligott said.</p></p>

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