Stocks Fall on Long-Short Battle, European Vaccine Row

European stocks and U.S. stock futures fell on Friday and the safe-haven dollar looked set for a weekly gain as a Wall Street battle between hedge funds and retail investors and a row in Europe over COVID-19 vaccine supply cooled risk appetite, Reuters informed.

Wall Street has been gripped by a coordinated assault by small traders organising over online forums, such as Reddit, to force hedge funds to reverse short positions – or bets that stocks would fall – on companies such as GameStop and AMC Entertainment.

The attack comes after central bank and government stimulus have propelled stock markets to record highs, encouraging buying by retail investors.

“The GameStop saga will end, leaving a sour taste in policymakers’ mouths,” said Ipek Ozkardeskaya, senior analyst at Swissquote Bank. “The story could be a trigger for action that could bring the government and the central bank to revise their ultra-loose policies that throw liquidity in the middle, and not towards a reasonable target.”

Brokers cut off borrowing facilities and restricted trading in some of the hottest names overnight, driving down their prices.

The boss of popular online broker Robinhood said the curbs were deployed to protect the brokerage and its customers but that some restrictions will be lifted on Friday.

S&P 500 futures fell 1.5% and Nasdaq 100 futures fell 1.8%, more than reversing gains made on Thursday as the earnings season got off to a strong start.

Britain’s FTSE 100 index fell 1.7% and was set to record its worst week since October. European stocks fell 1.5%.

COVID-19 vaccine production delays have snowballed into a spat between Britain, the European Union and drugmakers over how best to direct limited supplies.

Europe’s fight to secure vaccines intensified on Thursday when the EU warned drug companies that it would use all legal means or even block exports unless they agreed to deliver shots as promised.

Britain’s former vaccine chief Kate Bingham said on Friday she did not believe the EU would block exports.

New variants of the novel coronavirus have also prolonged lockdowns and delayed expectations of an economic rebound.

“The pandemic continues to cast a dark shadow and the timing of any recovery, economic or social, remains unclear,” said Richard Hunter, head of markets at Interactive Investor.

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