
European and US stock markets dropped on Tuesday after gains for Chinese indices, as traders sought to ascertain the outlook for US interest rates ahead of the presidential election.
Investor focus was also on company earnings, as gold and oil prices continued to win support from Middle East tensions.Â
The dollar was mixed against main rivals.
‘A mix of continuing unrest in the Middle East and uncertainty over the US election casts a cautious shadow over markets,’ noted Derren Nathan, head of equity research at Hargreaves Lansdown.
The latest polls appear to be giving Donald Trump a slight edge over Kamala Harris but are still within the margin of error.
Tech titans Alphabet and IBM announce their latest results over the next two days, while earnings from Boeing, Coca-Cola, and L’Oreal are also in the pipeline.
General Motors raised some of its full-year profit projections Tuesday following solid earnings as strong vehicle pricing compensated for lower auto sales.
3M, GE Aerospace, Lockheed Martin and Verizon also beat expectations.
Briefing.com analyst Patrick O’Hare said there is a bit of debate on why equities have retreated despite the generally good corporate earnings reports.
One is that a rise in market interest rates has created concerns that equities are trading at levels too high compared to their earnings.Â
‘The other possibility is that stocks hit some speed bumps yesterday because the market had gone up six straight weeks and was due for a pullback,’ he said.
Wall Street’s main indices fell at the start of trading, with the blue-chip Dow slipping 0.3 per cent.
All major European equity markets were in the red in afternoon trading, after gains for Shanghai and Hong Kong in the hope of more Chinese stimulus.
London stocks fell following data that showed UK public borrowing rose more than expected in September, as the new Labour government prepares for its first budget next week that is expected to include tax rises.Â
Frankfurt edged lower but was bolstered by strong third-quarter earnings for German software giant SAP, whose shares were up nearly four per cent in early afternoon deals.
Expectations of another bumper US interest-rate cut from the Federal Reserve have been tempered slightly following a recent run of strong American data on jobs creation and as some top decision-makers suggested they would like to see a slower pace of rate cuts.
Concerns over the outcome of the US election on November 5 have weighed on investor sentiment, with general consensus across polls and forecasts being that Donald Trump has ‘gained ground’ on Kamala Harris, Deutsche Bank economists noted.
Tokyo closed down more than one per cent Tuesday, even as the yen softened against the dollar to sit at its weakest level since early August.   Gold hit a fresh record high as traders sought out the haven investment as Israel considers its response to Iran’s missile barrage this month.
Uncertainty over the US presidential election has also helped fuel the precious metal’s rally, according to analysts who added that concerns about a possible wider conflict in the Middle East were lifting oil prices.