Recession fear grips Australia, NZ stock markets

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Australian and New Zealand shares fell sharply on Thursday as investors sold off equities globally in search of safety after a drop in a US
bond yield curve highlighted the risk of recession. The yield on the US Treasury 10-year note briefly fell below the two-year yield, a
pattern that is widely seen as an indicator of a looming recession. The inversion, as it is known, last happened in 2007 and proved to be
correct when the global financial crisis hit the following year. The S-P/ASX 200 index sank 2.9 per cent to 6,408.1 points, its lowest level
since early June
The benchmark had managed a 0.4 per cent gain on Wednesday after US President Donald Trump delayed tariffs on some Chinese imports, easing
some fears over the escalating US-China trade war. Worries of contagion gripped markets, with investors shifting money away from sectors
such as financials and mining to the relative safety of gold. Australia has proved in the past to be relatively resistant to global
recessions and was one of the few developed economies that escaped the crisis in 2008
However, interest rates are now at record lows, limiting the tools that the central bank has at its disposal to combat weakness. Australia's
Big Four banks - Commonwealth Bank of Australia CBA.AX, Westpac Banking Corp WBC.AX, National Australia Bank NAB.AX and Australia and New
Zealand Banking Group ANZ.AX - each slumped around 3 per cent. Australian miners, which are highly dependent on continuous global growth for
demand, were firmly in the red. BHP Group and Rio Tinto dropped 2.8 per cent and 2.7 per cent, respectively. The oil and gas sector suffered
heavy losses as well, with Woodside Petroleum closing 6.7 per cent lower
The company earlier posted a smaller half-year profit than a year earlier and lowered its interim dividend. Aside from gold stocks, one of
the few gainers was Treasury Wine Estates, which closed 2.2 per cent higher after proving it could withstand the impact of the trade war by
posting a record annual profit. Qantas Airways dropped 4.6 per cent amid the wider sell-off, after Boeing said it was facing engine-related
delays on its 777X wide-body planes that may hamper Qantas' crucial 21-hour non-stop Sydney-London flights in 2023. New Zealand's benchmark
S-P/NZX 50 index closed 1.3 per cent lower at 10,704.11. Dairy product maker a2 Milk slipped 2.1 per cent and utilities form Meridian Energy
declined 1.9 per cent.