Stock markets hit by US regional bank worries and trade tensions – business live | Business


FTSE 100 tumbles at the open amid US regional banking worries

The London stock market has fallen sharply at the start of trading, as investor confidence is rocked by fears over problems in the US regional banking sector.

The FTSE 100 index of blue-chip shares has tumbled by 131 points at the start of trading, a fall of 1.4%, down to 9304 points.

Banks are among the top fallers, with Barclays down 4.7%, Standard Chartered losing 4.3% amd NatWest off 3.1%. Asset manager ICG has lost 5%.

Traders are alarmed that two US banks yesterday disclosed issues with bad and fraudulent loans, raising fears that more problems may be lurking in the sector.

This comes on top of rising fears about the private credit sector, with IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva admitting yesterday that this keeps her awake at night.

Derren Nathan, head of equity research, Hargreaves Lansdown, explains why markets are sliding, with Wall Street set for fresh losses:

US stock futures are down today, as credit concerns compound the jitters over an escalation in US-China trade tensions and the ongoing government shutdown in Washington. This comes after Wall Street closed lower on Thursday. Despite growing hopes of further rate cuts this year, attention is turning to the underlying health of the economy, as emerging credit losses amongst America’s regional banks raised further questions about lending practices.

That’s done little to calm jitters about contagion from the bankruptcy of auto parts supplier First Brands, after it racked up billions of dollars in off-balance sheet trade financing agreements. This sort of debt can be difficult to map and it will take a while for the saga to play out. But on the flipside, the big US banks remain well capitalised and appear to be in rude health after Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Citi and Wells Fargo all beat Q3 estimates earlier in the week.

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European stock markets have also dropped like stones at the open.

France’s CAC 40 has fallen 1.5%, Spain’s IBEX lost 1.2%, and German’s DAX has lost 1.9%.

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