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LIVE MARKETS-93% of the STOXX in the red

Wed, 08th Sep 2021 08:47

* European shared down 1%

* Smiths gains after $2.7 bln unit sale

* Asian shares mixed, Tokyo up

* U.S. futures lower

Sept 8 - Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of
markets brought to you by Reuters reporters. You can share your
thoughts with us at markets.research@thomsonreuters.com

93% OF THE STOXX IN THE RED (0736 GMT)

With over nine out of each ten stocks on the STOXX 600
posting losses it's clearly a risk off start to the session.

The pan-regional index is down around 1% and absent any
specific news trigger it seems traders are looking to take some
risk off the table ahead of tomorrow's ECB meeting amid concerns
central banks may start to taper their bond purchases.

Very few are the stocks in positive territory. Smiths Group
is a standout gainer after the industrial technology firm sold
its medical unit for $2.7 billion. Its gains highlight perhaps
that in the today's market sellers are being rewarded.

Elsewhere selling pressure made little distinctions. All sub
sectors are in the red with autos and financial services leading
the way, both down around 1.7%.

(Danilo Masoni)

*****

TIME TO JOIN THE GREEN BOND GANG (0653 GMT)

As governments get back to business with debt issuance after
the summer break, there's something notable about this week's
debt sales in Europe -- it's green.

Germany on Wednesday will sell 10-year green bonds, a day
after Spain's debut green bond garnered an impressive 60 billion
euros of demand.

Green debt issuance globally, recently passed $1 trillion
for the first time, with 90% of sovereign issuance coming from
Europe. Britain will sell its first green bond later this month
while the European Union plans its first green issue in October.

A greenium index compiled by UniCredit, has risen to 4 basis
points, its highest level, indicating that demand for green
paper remains strong and investors are willing to pay a premium
to buy green European government debt.

Back to Germany. The benchmark euro zone debt issuer wants
to be the first to establish a green bond yield curve and
Wednesday's issuance takes it a step closer to that goal.

Another market that's seen action this week is Bitcoin. It
seems to have stabilised after a 17% plunge on
Tuesday, the day it become legal lender for the first time in a
sovereign state. However El Salvador's bitcoin adoption was
clouded by the price fall as well as technological glitches and
protests by mistrustful citizens.

Global stock markets too have stablised after Tuesday's wild
swings but growth concerns are weighing, with Asian shares down,
Europe poised to open negative and U.S. equity futures a touch
higher.

Later in the day, watch for U.S. JOLTS job openings data and
a raft of Fed speakers. And on Wall Street, GameStop, the
original 'meme stock,' releases earnings.

Key developments that should provide more direction to
markets on Wednesday:

- UK supermarket Morrisons is talking to its private
equity suitors and the UK Takeover Panel regarding an auction
to settle its future ownership.

- Deutsche Bank, Commerzbank CEOs attend Handelsblatt
conference

- Japan upgrades Q2 GDP on stronger business
spending

- PayPal heats up buy now, pay later race with $2.7 bln
Japan deal

- Interest rate meetings in Canada, Poland, Croatia

- Fed speakers: New York President John Williams 1710 GMT;
Dallas President Robert Kaplan 2200 GMT; Boston Fed President
Eric Rosengren, Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari 1800 GMT

- U.S. auctions 10-year bonds.

- US JOLTS job openings, Initial jobless claims, consumer
credit

(Dhara Ranasinghe)

*****

EUROPE HEADS SOUTH (0620 GMT)

European equities look set to kick off the day just slightly
in the red with futures on top country benchmarks losing as much
as 0.4% at the time of writing.

The mood in Asia wasn't exactly buoyant and although Tokyo
managed to reverse initial losses to extend its recent run
driven by stimulus bets, broader equity gauges were in the red.

Meantime in the U.S. futures pointed to possible gains later
on as investors await indications from Fed speakers about how
Friday's weak jobs report has impacted tapering plans.

In Europe the focus is on the ECB policy meeting on Thursday
where the central bank could unveil plans to slow down its
massive bond purchases.

In corporate news, M&A could help liven up the session.
French drugmaker Sanofi agreed to buy U.S. peer Kadmon in a $1.9
billion deal, while UK tech firm Smiths Group is to sell its
medical unit to UICU Medical for $2.4 billion.

(Danilo Masoni)

*****

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