UK and European stock markets fell
and the pound hit a fresh 31-year low as worries over the UK's vote to
leave the EU continue to rattle markets.
The UK's FTSE 100 share index closed 1.3% lower. US shares initially followed suit but closed higher.
Earlier, the pound fell to $1.2798, its lowest since 1985, before rebounding.
Analysts blamed warnings from the Bank of England that Brexit risks were "crystallising"
and fears about the UK commercial property market.
In
late trade, the pound was at about $1.29. Sterling has dropped by about
14% against the dollar since hitting $1.50 ahead of the referendum
result.
Against the euro, the pound was down 0.9% at €1.1656, having earlier hit its lowest level since 2013.
"Pessimistic
predictions for sterling are coming true," said Andrew Edwards, chief
executive of ETX Capital. "The pound is the chief proxy for the
post-Brexit mood in the markets."
Property sell-off
Wall Street
opened lower before making modest gains, with the Dow Jones closing up
0.4% at 17,918.62. The Nasdaq rallied 0.7% to 4,859.16 while the broader
S&P 500 gained 0.54% to 2,099.73.
But in the UK, shares in domestic companies, such as supermarkets, housebuilders and banks, took the biggest hit on Wednesday.
Tesco
and Morrisons were two of the biggest losers, with their shares
dropping more than 7% after analysts warned of a potential price war
among supermarkets.
Laith Khalaf, an analyst at Hargreaves
Lansdown, said further discounting would squeeze supermarkets' margins
at a time when the falling pound is set to make food imports more
expensive.
The FTSE 100 finished 82 points lower at 6,463.59, while the FTSE 250 - which contains more UK-focused companies - was 65 points, or 0.4%, lower at 15,669.71.
Property-related stocks have been especially hard hit this week after several fund managers decided to stop investors withdrawing money from their UK property funds.
On
Wednesday, Henderson Global Investors, Columbia Threadneedle
Investments and Canada Life became the latest companies to suspend
trading in their property funds.
Henderson Global Investors blamed
"exceptional liquidity pressures... as a result of uncertainty
following the EU referendum and the recent suspension of other direct
property funds".
Michael Hewson of CMC Markets said: "The
suspension of commercial property fund redemptions by a number of big
players has precipitated a broader sell-off in the UK property sector
including housebuilders and other asset managers."
Among the housebuilding sector, Barratt Developments fell more than 5% while Persimmon dropped 3.2%.
'Buyers' remorse'
European stock markets were also lower, with the Paris Cac, Frankfurt Dax and Madrid Ibex indexes all dropping nearly 2%.
Investors
are showing some "buyers' remorse" after last week's stock market
rebound and are focusing on "weak spots of the European economy", Mr
Hewson said.
Europe's financial sector, in particular, is under
pressure after the European Central Bank warned that Italian lender
Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena, the world's oldest bank, had
dangerously high levels of bad debt.
Shares in Deutsche Bank
earlier skidded to a record low of €11.40 before recovering a little and
Credit Suisse hit its lowest level since 1989, although Monte dei
Paschi rose 6% to €0.28 on hopes the EU will recapitalise the lender.
Earlier, Asian stock markets had closed lower, with Japan's Nikkei index down 1.9%.
Flight to safety
Government bond yields have also fallen to record lows as investors rush to put money in perceived havens.
Yields
on 10-year US, Swiss and German government bonds hit new record lows,
while the return from a 20-year Japanese government bond turned negative
for the first time on Wednesday.
In the UK, the yield on
10-year gilts fell to as low as 0.731%, almost half its level on the day
of the referendum vote, further underlining the hit investors are
willing to take to keep their money in rock-solid government debt.
High demand pushes up bond prices, and when the price of bonds rises, their yield falls.
The
price of gold touched a two-year high of $1,375.45 an ounce. Also seen
as a safe haven, gold surpassed the $1,358.20 mark it reached on 24 June
in the immediate aftermath of the Brexit vote.
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