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Stocks, oil, euro slide on Austria’s lockdown

AFP
21 Nov 2021 00:00:00 | Update: 21 Nov 2021 02:20:42
Stocks, oil, euro slide on Austria’s lockdown

European stocks fell Friday along with the euro as Austria announced a new partial lockdown to try to curb surging Covid cases, which also triggered heavy losses for oil prices.

The latest Covid-19 rules in Austria and more limited steps in Germany added pressure to US markets, although the Nasdaq finished at an all-time high on strength in tech shares.

The restrictions in Austria will begin Monday and vaccination against Covid-19 in the eurozone country will become mandatory from February, Chancellor Alexander Schallenberg said.

Fawad Razaqzada, market analyst at ThinkMarkets, warned of a “short-term correction as investors wake up to the risks facing the eurozone economy,” despite the prospect of a weaker euro boosting exports.

“It is not necessarily about Austria,” he said, pointing to “concerns that similar lockdown measures might be introduced to other parts of Europe.”

Bourses in London, Paris and Frankfurt all fell, with travel sector firms especially hard hit as British Airways shed six percent or around £400m off the carrier’s market capitalization.

Oil prices tumbled and the benchmark Brent North Sea oil contract fell about three percent to under $80 per barrel.

Back on Wall Street, both the Dow and S&P 500 retreated as investors largely shrugged off the House’s approval of Biden’s $1.8 trillion package to address climate change and bolster the US safety net, awaiting its passage in the Senate.

But the Nasdaq jumped 0.4 per cent to finish above 16,000 points for the first time as markets weighed the risk of economic weakness due to another Covid-19 wave.

“What the tech gains could be showing is the reemergence of growth concerns,” said Briefing.com analyst Patrick O’Hare, alluding to the latest Covid-19 restrictions in Europe.

Earlier, Asian stock markets mostly closed higher, but Chinese e-commerce titan Alibaba plunged by more than 10 per cent after warning of a weaker outlook following China’s crackdown on the tech sector and slowing growth in the world’s second-biggest economy.

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