* MSCI world index stays just off 21-month high
* Investors expect Fed to cut rates, focus on policy outlook
* European shares slip, but Fiat-Peugeot merger news caps
losses
* First-stage trade deal may be delayed
(Updates, adds quote, charts)
By Sujata Rao
LONDON, Oct 30 (Reuters) - World shares slipped off 21-month
highs on Wednesday as the prospect of a U.S. rate cut was
offset by reports a Sino-U.S. trade deal may be delayed, though
a possible $50 billion merger between Fiat-Chrysler and PSA
capped European losses.
Sentiment has also been dented by weak earnings from a
swathe of companies ranging from European banking giant Deutsche
to tech titan Google, and by renewed uncertainty in Britain,
which is set to hold a parliamentary election on Dec. 12.
After falls of around 0.5% on Asian bourses MIAPJ0000PUS
.N225 .CSI300 , Europe's pan-European equity benchmark
.STOXX was trading near flat%. But European auto shares
.SXAP rose 0.7% and shares in Fiat Chrysler FCHA.MI and
French PSA PEUP.PA jumped 7-8% on news they were in talks for
a merger valued at as much as $50 billion sentiment was undermined however by a Reuters report
quoting a U.S. official as saying an interim trade agreement
between Washington and Beijing might not be completed in time
for signing next month. That hit Europe's trade-sensitive tech .SX8P and commodity
shares .SXPP and MSCI's world equity index .MIWD00000PUS
edged down after five successive sessions in the black.
Michael Hewson, chief market strategist at CMC Markets, said
the deal news had not sharply lifted shares because regulatory
hurdles remain, not least the French government's stake in PSA.
"We've seen a lot of companies exploring M&A and I struggle
to understand why this deal in particular is any more probable
than the one with Renault," he said, said referring to Fiat's
failed attempt to acquire another French carmaker.
Some caution has also crept in before the U.S. Federal
Reserve announcement at 1800 GMT. Fed funds rate futures 0#FF:
price a 25 basis-point cut but markets are fixated on what
signal the central bank will send.
"The Fed could be quite hawkish in terms of 'this is it' and
send a message markets don't really want to hear. They are
pricing the Fed on a full-blown cutting path and that may not be
what the Fed wants to convey," Hewson said, noting still-robust
U.S. growth and booming stock markets.
FLOOR AND CAP
World stocks are almost 3% higher this month, pushing U.S.
Treasury yields to six-week highs of 1.86% while German yields
are set for their biggest monthly rise since Jan 2018
US10YT=RR DE10YT=RR .
Equity futures signalled a flat to weaker open for Wall
Street, after the S&P500 hit a record high .SPX , closing lower
after the trade deal report ESc1 YMc1 NQc1 .
Adding to that was a disappointing report from Google parent
Alphabet GOOGL.O while in Europe Deutsche Bank DBKGn.DE fell
6% after reporting a loss for the second consecutive quarter.
Germany's Volkswagen VOWG_p.DE provided a reminder of
slowing global demand, cutting its 2019 sales outlook,
Its shares initially slipped 0.7% after
rebounding.
Marie Owens-Thomsen, chief economist at wealth manager
Indosuez, said share prices were supported by central bank
policies but "we are clearly in a slowing world economy and in
that context its hard to see how companies can sell more and
enlarge their profit margins.
"So there is floor put in by central banks but from here
there should also be a cap (on share prices), given the economic
slowdown."
Another source of uncertainty is Britain's Dec. 12 snap
election, which could throw the future of Brexit up in the air
again if no party wins a conclusive majority. That has dampened recent UK market cheer, with sterling
losing 1.2% in the past week. On Wednesday it firmed modestly
versus the dollar and euro around $1.29 and 86.3 pence
respectively GBP=D3 EURGBP=D3 .
The dollar retreated 0.1% against other major currencies
.DXY before the Fed and an advance reading of third-quarter
U.S. economic growth.
Against the yen, the greenback was steady at 108.87 yen
JPY= just off a three-month high.
Tohru Sasaki, head of Japan markets research at JPMorgan
Chase said a hawkish Fed message could send the dollar/yen
above 110 yen but he added that "if the market is going to price
in two more cuts after this month's expected cut, the pair could
fall to mid-107 yen level".
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Fiat vs Peugeot shares https://tmsnrt.rs/2Nmhg1f
Back to the 90s interactive https://tmsnrt.rs/2Nn8BLJ
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