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China-Led Risk-Off Move, Twitter Meets Musk, Macron Wins - What's Moving Markets

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By Geoffrey Smith

Investing.com -- Risk assets around the world tumbled as Covid-19 reached the Chinese capital of Beijing, hitting all local markets hard and adding to fears of stagflation further afield. Palm oil rose 7% as the world's largest producer, Indonesia, imposed an export ban to stop domestic prices rising. U.S. stocks are set to extend Friday's losses, with Twitter (NYSE:TWTR) not unduly moved by news that its board had met with Elon Musk to discuss his bid at the weekend. Emmanuel Macron handily beat far-right challenger Marine Le Pen to win a second term as President of France, while German business confidence avoids a second straight monthly drop. Here's what you need to know in financial markets on Monday, 25th April.

1. Panic buying in Beijing triggers panic selling everywhere else

Chinese assets tumbled, dragging down European stocks and global prices for oil and industrial metals, as the wave of Omicron-variant Covid-19 reached the capital city, Beijing.

Newswires reported panic buying of foodstuffs and other essentials as the city’s 21 million inhabitants braced for a lockdown similar to that which has roiled Shanghai and other major centers in recent weeks.

The Shanghai Shenzhen CSI 300 index fell over 6% and the Hang Seng 3.7%, while Iron ore futures fell over 10% as traders fretted about the possible closure of the region’s steel mills. The offshore Chinese yuan lost nearly 1% to its lowest in just under two years, having also come under pressure from a separate direction: the People’s Bank of China has reportedly authorized banks to loosen lending conditions to a raft of troubled developers, whose mountain of unsold properties has grown as Covid lockdowns have gummed up the housing market still further.

2. Twitter board softens on Musk stance

The board of Twitter has started discussions with Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) CEO Elon Musk about a possible sale, according to various reports. If confirmed, that would represent an abrupt reversal by the social media company after it adopted a poison-pill defense to block Musk’s unwelcome $43 billion bid.

Musk had last week announced that he had secured funding for his bid, making it harder for Twitter’s board to dismiss it out of hand. The Wall Street Journal and others reported that the two sides had met on Sunday and were making progress, although there were few details available.

Twitter (NYSE:TWTR) stock rose 1.2% in premarket trading but was still nearly 9% below Musk’s offer price of $54.20, which he has said is his “best and final” proposal. The discount reflects ongoing skepticism that the bid will succeed.