European bourses start the trading steeply lower as the new week kicks off. Rising Covid cases and tighter measures to stem the spread of the virus are raising fears that the fragile economic recovery will quickly be derailed, examines Fiona Cincotta of Currency live.

Fears of a double dip recession are overshadowing upbeat vaccine news. Although reports that the UK government is considering reducing the quarantine period for Covid contacts is helping the FTSE, which hasn’t fallen as steeply as its European peers on the open. 

The US and France recorded a record number of coronavirus cases, Spain announced a national curfew and Italy a partial lockdown. Meanwhile in the UK Covid cases topped 23,000 with the Northeast and West seeing the biggest increase in cases.  

Still, risk-off is dominating as investors fret over the impact that tighter restrictive measures will have on economic growth. Riskier assets such as stocks are out of favor, whilst flows into safer havens such as the US dollar are on the rise.  

Not all bad news 

News that the British government is considering a shorter isolation period, reduced from 14 days to 7 days for those who have been in contact with someone who tested positive is offering some support to the UK index, which hasn’t sold off as deeply on the open as its European counterparts 

News that the Oxford University/AstraZeneca vaccine produces a robust immune response in elderly people, the group at highest risk is broadly being shrugged off by investors. As is news that the vaccine is likely to be distributed to NHS frontline workers and the most vulnerable in December. 

A slow start to a busy week 

Whilst Covid is set to remain a key driver in the market this week, in addition to US elections and US stimulus negotiations, this week is also a key week for corporate releases with UK banks and 4 of the FAANGs reporting, in addition to other big names such as BP, Next, GSK just to mention a few. 

Looking ahead it is a relatively slow start to the week with just IFO business sentiment in focus.  

FTSE Charts 

ftse

The FTSE trades -0.6%. It trades below its 50, 100 & 200 SMA on the four-hour chart and below a descending trendline, which has been in place since early June—a bearish chart. 

Immediate support can be seen at 5760, today’s low prior to 5715, last week’s low.

Immediate resistance is at 5855 50 SMA prior to 5910/20 region where the 100 & 200 SMA sit. A move above 5970 is needed to negate the current bearish trend. 

To learn more about Fiona Cincotta, please visit CurrencyLive.com.