'Pick-your-poison': Wall Street sell-off resumes

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By Lawrence Delevingne

(Reuters) - Investors added another cycle of selling on Thursday as the dollar barely eased its stranglehold on currency markets, recession fears sapped stocks and bonds suffered more interest rate pain.

After a partial rebound on Wednesday, U.S. stocks fell sharply. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 1.5%, the S&P 500 lost 2.1% to a new low for 2022, and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 2.8%, weighed down by big technology names such as Apple Inc and Amazon.com Inc. [.N]

European stocks also suffered. The STOXX 600 share index was down 1.67%, even as the euro and the pound, hammered over the last week by UK debt concerns, recovered some ground, gaining 0.6% and 1.7%, respectively. [.EU][/FRX]

China currency intervention talk was gathering momentum too, while Europe's government bond markets were braced for the highest German inflation reading since the 1950s.

Gilt selling also resumed a day after the Bank of England had dramatically intervened to try and quell the storm surrounding the British government's new spending plans. [GVD/EUR]

"It's a pick-your-poison collection of bad news for investors," Sean Sun, portfolio manager at Thornburg Investment Management in Santa Fe, New Mexico, said in an email.

"From strong jobs data pushing the Fed to be more hawkish to the turmoil in the entire UK stock and bond markets to China intervening to prop up the yuan, with increasing geopolitical issues investors are left few places to hang their hats."

UK SEEKS STABILITY

The UK 10-year gilt yield, which drives Britain's borrowing costs, rose about 8 basis points (bps) to 4.214% after falling almost 50 bps the day before due to the BoE's sudden intervention, although the 30-year yield being targeted by the central bank was little changed at 3.96%.

Agnes Belaisch, Barings Investment Institute's chief European strategist, said "the market wouldn't mind some stability," as "it has become a little bit unpredictable."

She said investors were now seeing "incoherence" in Britain with government spending as the Bank of England tries to rein in inflation, while everywhere else the focus is on how high central banks are prepared to go with interest rates.

British Prime Minister Liz Truss defended her new economic program that has sent sterling to a record low this week and left the UK's borrowing costs close to Greece's - saying it was designed to tackle the difficult situation Britain was now in.

"We are facing difficult economic times," Truss, who only took over as prime minister this month, said on local BBC radio. "I don't deny this. This is a global problem. But what is absolutely right is the UK government has stepped in and acted."