Global stocks creep up
amid Fed limbo, dollar dips
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[August 23, 2016]
By Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - World shares crept
up on Tuesday while the dollar lost ground as investors awaited
further clues on whether the Federal Reserve will raise U.S.
interest rates this year.
European equities were 0.5 percent higher led by mining and banking
stocks [.EU] after data that pointed to a gradual improvement in the
region's economy. The euro also posted gains. [/FRX]
Early encouragement came from France where surprisingly upbeat PMI
figures showed the private sector growing at its fastest pace in 10
months, and in Denmark where consumer confidence jumped.
Germany's PMI reading also reassured, as a combined manufacturing
and services sector survey came in comfortably above the line that
separates growth from contraction.
"The German economy is continuing its uninterrupted upward trend in
August," Markit Economist Oliver Kolodseike said.
In forex markets, the dollar was the central focus as it slipped
0.25 percent to 94.286 against a basket of currencies <.DXY>. The
index fell about 1.3 percent last week on what traders perceived as
mixed signals from Fed officials.
The focus now is on a speech Fed Chair Janet Yellen is due to give
at the annual central bank symposium in Jackson Hole on Friday.
Investors still doubt the stars will align for a hike anytime soon,
so a hawkish tone from Yellen would challenge that view.
The dollar drifted as low as 99.91 yen <JPY=> in early European
trade and then spent much of the session hovering just above the 100
yen barrier.
The euro was 0.3 percent firmer at $1.1345 <EUR=>.
New Zealand's dollar was up three-quarters of a cent at $0.7323 <NZD=D4>
after the country's central bank forecast another 35 basis points in
possible rate cuts, less than many investors had wagered on.
"The (U.S.) dollar is weakening... due to the general anticipation
around Jackson Hole on Friday," said Saxo bank's head of FX strategy
John Hardy.
"There is also a general reach for yield happening. That was one of
the things we saw with (New Zealand central bank governor) Wheeler
waving the white flag and saying that he is not going to use easing
to try and weaken the currency."
OIL GIVES GROUND
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan
added 0.3 percent in slow trade overnight.
South Korea , Australia and Shanghai all gained, while Japan's
Nikkei went the other way, easing 0.6 percent as the yen
ground higher on the dollar.
[to top of second column] |
Traders work at their desks in front of the German share price
index, DAX board, at the stock exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, June
24, 2016 after Britain voted to leave the European Union in the EU
BREXIT referendum. REUTERS/Ralph Orlowski
A survey of Japanese manufacturing activity for August showed output rose for
the first time in six months, but the improvement was marginal and investors
fixed their focus on the Fed instead.
"The market does seem to be reluctantly acknowledging the chorus of senior Fed
speakers who have suggested recently that a 2016 rate hike is still quite
probable and September is 'live'," wrote analysts at ANZ in a note.
"But in reality, the response has been very muted."
Indeed, 10-year U.S. Treasury yields ticked up to 1.55 percent after falling 4
basis points overnight. German Bund yields nudged up as well along with the rest
of the euro zone and UK Gilts.
Fed fund futures <0#FF:> imply around a 24 percent chance of an easing in
September, rising to around 50 percent by December. A quarter-point hike is not
fully priced in until September 2017.
In commodity markets, oil remained under pressure after shedding 3 percent on
Monday amid worries about burgeoning Chinese fuel exports, more Iraqi and
Nigerian crude shipments and a rising U.S. oil rig count.
Brent crude lost 25 cents to $48.96 a barrel. It hit a two-month high of $51.22
on Friday. U.S. crude futures fell 36 cents to $47.07, after the September
contract expired on Monday at $47.05.
Futures markets pointed to Wall Street creeping higher later, having ended
little changed on Monday.
Biotech stocks received a boost from Pfizer's $14 billion acquisition of cancer
drug maker Medivation, which jumped nearly 20 percent.
The first August U.S. PMI surveys are also due later.
(Additional reporting by Wayne Cole in Sydney; editing by John Stonestreet)
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