Market Volatility At 2-Month Low

 | Mar 21, 2016 10:48AM ET

Volatility across global financial markets is at a two-month low as signs central banks will keep borrowing costs lower for longer settle investor nerves that frayed at the start of the year.

U.S. stocks were little changed after last week erasing losses for the year, while European shares slipped. The Shanghai Composite Index topped 3,000 for the first time in two months amid plans to loosen margin-lending curbs. Treasuries retreated, the pound fell as tensions within the ruling Conservative Party deepened and crude fluctuated near $39.50 a barrel in New York.

Markets have calmed after a volatile first six weeks of 2016, which saw U.S. equities post the worst opening period on record. While policy easing by the European Central Bank and Bank of Japan and a forecast for a shallower trajectory of U.S. interest-rate increases helped settle price swings, investor confidence remains fragile.

“Markets have had a pretty tremendous month, we’re pretty far extended and certainly due for some pullback,” said Michael James, managing director of equity trading at Wedbush Securities Inc. in Los Angeles. “It’s been a pretty impressive run, but even with all that heavy lifting we’ve had, all it’s done is gotten to flat on the year. I would expect the market’s going to take a breather and it should.”

The Bank of America Merrill Lynch Market Risk Index, a gauge tracking volatility expectations for equities, bonds, currencies and commodities, fell to minus 0.24 on Friday, the least since Jan. 6.

Equities

The S&P 500 Index slipped 0.1 percent at 9:31 a.m. in New York, after capping a fifth straight weekly gain that wiped out a loss in 2016 that reached as much as 11 percent in February.

Deals boosted the market, while energy shares slumped. Valspar Corp. surged after Sherwin-Williams Co (NYSE:SHW). agreed to buy the company for about $9.3 billion. Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide (NYSE:HOT) advanced after accepting an improved bid from Marriott International Inc. valued at $13.6 billion. Valeant Pharmaceuticals International (NYSE:VRX). fell amid a shakeup in the company’s board.

Glencore (LON:GLEN) and Antofagasta (LON:ANTO) helped pull resource-related companies to the biggest drop among European equities, while Total SA (PA:TOTF) dragged oil stocks lower. Telecom Italia (MI:TLIT) climbed 3.4 percent after saying that Chief Executive Officer Marco Patuano is discussing the terms of his resignation. Gas Natural SDG SA added 1.3 percent after changing its dividend proposal and increasing its payout ratio.