World stocks tumbled for a fourth day and were on course for their worst week since November, as the escalating war of words over North Korea drove investors on Friday towards the yen, the Swiss franc and gold.
Europe's main London, Frankfurt and Paris markets started between 0.5 and 1.1 per cent lower and Germany's ultra-safe 10-year government bonds were trading at their highest prices since June.
US President Donald Trump had issued a new verbal warning to Pyongyang on Thursday, saying that his previous promise to unleash “fire and fury” may not have been strong enough after North Korea responded with a threat to land a missile near the US Pacific territory of Guam.
Japanese markets were closed for a holiday but the in-demand yen powered on, hitting an eight-week high of 108.91 yen to the dollar, adding to its biggest weekly gain since May.
The yen tends to benefit during times of geopolitical or financial stress as Japan is the world's biggest creditor nation and there is an assumption that Japanese investors there will repatriate funds should a crisis materialise.
The Swiss franc, the other traditional currency safety-play, has benefited too. Two weeks ago it saw its biggest weakly fall against the euro since the start of 2015. This week has been its biggest rise since June 2016.
“Geopolitical tensions are the main focus: the S&P 500 was down 1.5 per cent last night and many investors are becoming risk averse,” said DZ Bank strategist Andy Cossor.
Many world stock markets have hit record or multi-year highs in recent weeks, leaving them vulnerable to a sell-off, and the tensions over North Korea have proved the trigger.
The CBOE Volatility Index, the most widely followed barometer of expected near-term U.S. stock market volatility, hit its highest mark since November 8, when Trump was elected president.
The Chinese volatility gauge jumped by the most since January 2016 to its highest level in more than seven months. The euro zone's version is the highest since April, when France's election was rattling the region.
Overnight, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan had skidded 1.55 per cent, its biggest one-day loss since mid-December, to leave it down 2.5 per cent for the week.
“What has changed this time is that the scary threats and war of words between the U.S. and North Korea have intensified to the point that markets can't ignore it,” said Shane Oliver, head of investment strategy at AMP Capital in Sydney.
“Of course, it's all come at a time when share markets are due for a correction, so North Korea has provided a perfect trigger.”
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South Korea's KOSPI fell 1.8 per cent to an 11-1/2-week low, but its losses for the week are a relatively modest 3.2 per cent. “Pretty remarkable, perhaps even extraordinary, considering,” said fund manager BlueBay strategist Tim Ash.
The Korean won also continued to skid, down 0.45 per cent to 1,147.2, falling below its 200-day moving average for the first time in a month.
Australian shares were down 1.3 per cent, set for a weekly loss of 0.6 percent and Chinese and Hong Kong bluechips lost 1.6 per cent and 1.9 per cent, respectively.
A Chinese state-run newspaper said on Friday that China should make clear that it will stay neutral if North Korea launches an attack that threatens the United States, but that if the US attacks first and tries to overthrow North Korea's government, China will prevent it doing so.
“This situation is beginning to develop into this generation's Cuban Missile crisis moment,” ING's chief Asia economist Robert Carnell wrote in a note.
The market's backstop safety asset, gold, edged up to its latest two-month high of $1,288 an ounce. It soared over 2 per cent in the previous two sessions, and is set for a weekly gain of 2.25 per cent.
Crude futures extended losses on fears of slowing demand and lingering concerns over a global oversupply meanwhile. US crude was down 0.9 per cent at $48.16 per barrel, on track for a weekly loss of 2.9 per cent.
Global benchmark Brent also fell 0.9 per cent to $51.44, after Thursday's 1.5 per cent drop. It is poised to end the week down 1.9 per cent. The industrial bellwether metal copper was set for its first weekly drop in five weeks.