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Equity traders tread carefully ahead of bank decisions

London - Global stock markets drifted on Tuesday with dealers on tenterhooks on the first day of key monetary policy meetings for the US Federal Reserve and Bank of Japan (BoJ).

Around 10:30 GMT, London's benchmark FTSE 100 index was up 0.5% compared with the close on Monday.
In the eurozone, Frankfurt's DAX 30 won 0.6% and the Paris CAC edged 0.3% higher.

The Federal Reserve and Bank of Japan were kicking off two-day policy meetings on Tuesday.

The Fed heads into one of its most keenly awaited gatherings after weeks of speculation that has fanned volatility across global trading floors, with investors split on whether the US central bank will lift interest rates.

At the same time opinion is divided on what the Bank of Japan's intentions are, with expectations for fresh stimulus tempered by a lack of concrete promises from Tokyo, despite weak Japanese growth and almost non-existent inflation.

"Stocks markets are not seeing much movement on Tuesday," noted analyst Jasper Lawler at trading firm CMC Markets.

"Investing decisions are being restrained by this week's central bank policy meetings which have the potential to upend current thinking on the low interest rate environment."

Asian markets also drifted and the dollar was virtually unmoved with investors also biding their time.
Tokyo's Nikkei index swung to and fro through the day before ending 0.2% lower.

Hong Kong shed 0.1% by the close and Shanghai lost 0.1% following healthy gains on Monday.

Potential for volatility

"It's not unusual for traders to adopt a more cautious approach ahead of these events, particularly when we have two on the same day, both of which have the potential to create huge amounts of volatility in the markets," said Oanda analyst Craig Erlam.

In company news, GlaxoSmithKline shares shed 0.6% to 16.36 pence, as investors reacted to a new boss at the British drugs giant.

GSK said it had appointed Emma Walmsley, its head of consumer healthcare, to lead the group and find new treatments in a fast-consolidating sector.

Walmsley, who joined GSK from French cosmetics giant L'Oreal six years ago and has a background in marketing, will take up her new post at the end of March.

Back in Tokyo, Japanese airbag supplier Takata tumbled 11.6% after a report said some potential buyers were considering bankruptcy proceedings if they are successful in its purchase.

The firm has been hit by the global auto industry's biggest-ever safety recall over its exploding bags.
 
Bloomberg News said private equity firms and auto parts makers were preparing offers for the company, and some were considering the drastic bankruptcy action to mitigate the liabilities.

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