Global Markets: Sentiment sapped by COVID surge, stimulus stalemate

By Marc Jones

LONDON (Reuters) - World shares slipped to a two-week low and oil steadied after another heavy fall on Thursday, as the global surge in COVID-19 cases and fractious U.S. stimulus talks kept financial markets cautious.

U.S. traders were digesting a drop in weekly jobless claims ahead of Wall Street trading, but with Europe's bourses battling to avoid a fourth consecutive drop and pre-U.S. election paralysis setting in, the conditions were choppy.

Disappointing German consumer morale data meant it was the first dip of the week for the high-flying euro while Turkey's lira went tumbling again as its central bank baulked at hiking interest rates.

Europe has seen coronavirus cases surge to a record high, with Spain becoming the first Western European country to exceed 1 million infections and France, Britain and Italy all seeing recent record increases.

Bond market caution also ushered sensitive Italian government debt yields higher though there was also roaring demand for a 30-year bond sale there and the early drift back into ultra-safe German Bunds didn't last past lunchtime.

"In the summer we were in the eye of the storm, I think," said Rabobank strategist Piotr Matys, likening the drop in COVID-19 cases to the lull that occurs in the middle of hurricanes.

"Some governments assumed the worst was over ... but now the invisible enemy is hitting even harder and I am worried about the fragile economic recovery."

Sentiment was also being buffeted after U.S. President Donald Trump accused rival Democrats on Wednesday of being unwilling to craft an acceptable compromise on fresh stimulus, following reports of progress earlier in the day.

It remains unclear whether negotiations will continue ahead of the U.S. presidential and congressional elections on Nov. 3 although the subject may come up later when Trump and Joe Biden go head-to-head in the final presidential debate.

"We still think that this deal will remain elusive in the sense that this amount that we are talking about, $1.88 trillion, that's about 9% of GDP, said Carlos Casanova, a senior economist at Union Bancaire Privee (UBP) in Hong Kong.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi's package is even higher at around 10% of GDP.

"Even if both sides do manage to reach an agreement, given the tight deadline ahead of the election it's unlikely that something like that would be able to go through the Senate smoothly," said Casanova.

In the currency markets, the dollar was a modest 0.1% higher against the yen at 104.65, while the euro's dip saw it notch down 0.3% to $1.1820.

But against a basket of major peers the dollar appeared relatively unaffected by setbacks to stimulus talks, steadying after touching a seven-week low to trade slightly higher at 92.736.