Global equities finish an erratic week on a subdued note

In a week of sharp ups and downs, global equities were perhaps ready for a quiet day as Friday swung around, and a quiet day is what they got.

The Dow Jones led the pack, up 0.81% to 27,756 points – or put another way, just shy of the 28k mark it has seen as something of a second home since breaking its all-time record last December.

Following close behind were Asian equities, with Shanghai’s SSE Composite up 0.79% to 3,260, the Hong Kong Hang Seng Index up 0.78% to 24,503 and Tokyo’s TOPIX up 0.72%, at 1,636 points.

Failing to really be inspired by the US entry this afternoon, Eurozone indexes lagged behind, with Germany’s DAX down by 0.17% to 13,187 and France’s CAC up by a modest 0.16%, to 5,032 points. Just ahead was the FTSE, up by exactly 0.50%, to 6,033, as the last bell of the week sounded in London.

This last spurt of energy was in UK equities was likely led by a mixture of the Sterling’s slow recovery after a rough start to the week, and slight giddiness at July’s better-than-expected GDP reading.

Talking on the Pound Sterling and the outlook for the coming week – between Chinese data and continued big tech volatility – Spreadex Financial Analyst, Connor Campbell, commented:

“[…] the pound also effectively sat on its hands, up 0.1% against the dollar but down the same amount against the euro. News of 6.6% growth in July meant little to the currency given the deafening no deal Brexit alarm bells that have been ringing all week.”

“Turning to next week and it’s a bit of a gauntlet for investors, with a Chinese data dump in the early hours of Tuesday morning – including the all-important retail sales reading – followed by the latest UK jobs report; a Fed meeting on Wednesday night; and September’s Bank of England get-together at Thursday lunchtime.”

“And that’s not to mention the volatile state of the US tech sector, which is still twisting and turning in the wind.”

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Jamie Gordon
Senior Journalist at the UK Investor Magazine. Also a contributing writer at the Investment Observer, UK Property Journal and UK Startup Magazine. Postgraduate of King's College London with a specialisation in Business Ethics. Interested in Development Economics and David Hume.