Updated March 12th, 2020 at 16:09 IST

Stocks, crude hammered as Trump's Europe ban fans recession fears

Global equities and oil prices fell through the floor again on Thursday after Donald Trump banned all travel from mainland Europe to the US for a month to fight the coronavirus, ramping up fears the global economy will careen into recession.

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Global equities and oil prices fell through the floor again on Thursday after Donald Trump banned all travel from mainland Europe to the US for a month to fight the coronavirus, ramping up fears the global economy will careen into recession.

The news came after the World Health Organization officially labeled the outbreak a pandemic and hit out at "alarming levels of inaction" for its spread. Asian equity markets, already deep in the red in reaction to the WHO announcement, cratered after Trump's address. Tokyo ended down 4.4 percent, putting it in a bear market after falling more than 20 percent from a recent high, while Sydney lost 7.4 percent in the ASX 200's worst day since the 2008 financial crisis.

Hong Kong fell 3.7 percent, though Shanghai was off 1.5 percent as China continues to see infection rates slow.

Seoul, Singapore and Jakarta lost more than three percent, Mumbai tanked more than six percent and Wellington slid five percent, while Taipei retreated 4.3 percent.

Manila crashed 10 percent -- sparking a brief trading halt -- after it emerged Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte would undergo a precautionary test for the virus, while his finance minister and head of the central bank were among several officials who were to go into quarantine. It ended down 9.7 percent. Bangkok also triggered an automatic halt by falling 10 per cent.

In early trade London and Paris each plunged 4.5 percent, while Frankfurt dived five percent. Gulf markets also tumbled, with Riyadh down more than 4.0 percent. The Japanese yen, a key haven in times of crisis, jumped more than one percent against the dollar.

"Travel restrictions equal slower global economic activity, so if you need any more coaxing to sell... after a massively negative signal from trading in US markets it just fell in your lap," said AxiCorp's Stephen Innes. The losses followed another brutal session on Wall Street, where the Dow fell into a bear market and futures pointed Thursday to another rout.

The coronavirus outbreak has left virtually no sector untouched, though travel and tourism have been particularly hard-hit as countries institute travel bans and quarantine requirements, with Italy in a country-wide lockdown. The number of cases across the globe has risen to more than 126,000 with 4,600 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University.

In announcing the Europe ban -- which excludes Britain -- Trump said the continent had seen a surge in new cases because governments failed to stop travel from China, where the COVID-19 epidemic began. He said the prohibitions would also "apply to the tremendous amount of trade and cargo," and "various other things as we get approval".

However, the White House afterwards clarified that "the people transporting goods will not be admitted into the country, but the goods will be". Oil prices were also hammered, with both main contracts falling around six per cent at one point before edging back slightly. The oil market was already under pressure after Saudi Arabia and Gulf partner UAE stepped up a price war with plans to flood global markets.

"We are now staring at the whole world going into a lockdown," Vandana Hari, of Vanda Insights, said. "Oil demand can be expected to crash through the floor and all previous projections on oil consumption are now out the door." The Saudi move was the latest escalation of a fight among oil producers after Russia balked at an OPEC-backed plan to cut production in response to lost demand because of the coronavirus.

"Markets are crying out for a co-ordinated response to COVID-19 headwinds and a lack of concrete US policy action is rattling markets," said Tapas Strickland, senior analyst at National Australia Bank.

Trump's address included several measures intended to ease the financial burden particularly for small business, including payroll tax relief and deferred tax payments. But he did not unveil any large-scale tax cuts, which OANDA's Jefrey Halley said "has probably disappointed markets more than anything".

The bloodbath across global trading floors has come despite a raft of measures by governments worth at least $150 billion to offset the impact of the outbreak, while central banks will be called upon to cut already low interest rates and introduce other fiscal measures.German Chancellor Angela Merkel has said she will do "whatever is necessary" to help the economy, while the European Central Bank is to hold a policy meeting later in the day at which it is under pressure to open up the taps.

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Published March 12th, 2020 at 16:09 IST