Global stocks, euro dip as Macron win
shifts focus to economy
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[May 08, 2017]
By Nigel Stephenson
LONDON (Reuters) - European stocks and the
euro pulled back on Monday from highs touched after Emmanuel Macron's
emphatic but well-flagged victory in France's presidential election as
investors' focus shifted from politics to monetary policy.
With the political risks that have dominated European markets in a year
packed with elections seen receding, the European Central Bank is
expected to have more room to tighten policy as the euro zone economic
recovery gathers pace.
European equities dipped, with French shares, which hit 9 1/2-year highs
on Friday, underperforming the wider market.
The euro dipped against the dollar, having risen in early Asian trade to
just above $1.10 when opinion polls signaled the scale of Macron's
victory over anti-euro nationalist Marine Le Pen.
It was a similar story in euro zone government debt markets: the premium
investors demand to hold French rather than German benchmark 10-year
bonds narrowed to its tightest in six months as markets opened on
Monday, but then reversed.
"Investors will now go back to the basics of watching the underlying
euro zone economic and inflation data and what implications it may have
for monetary policy," said Iain Stealey, a fixed income portfolio
manager for JPMorgan Asset Management.
Although Macron's victory with his business-friendly vision of European
integration ensured there was no repeat of the populist surges that saw
Britain vote to leave the European Union and President Donald Trump
elected in the United States, the result was widely expected and
analysts had forecast no major market moves.
That said, world stocks, as measured by MSCI's 46-country world index
held close to a record high as the main measure of Asia-Pacific shares,
excluding Japan, rose 0.8 percent.
Tokyo shares, resuming trade after a three-day market holiday, closed up
2.3 percent at a 17-month high.
The pan-European STOXX 600 index was down 0.1 percent while France's CAC
40 index fell 0.6 percent.
Wall Street looked set to open modestly lower as index futures,
including those on the S&P 500, which earlier hit a record high,
reversed direction and fell.
In currency markets, the euro rose to a six-month high of $1.1024 in
early Asian trade but last stood at $1.0959, down 0.4 percent on the
day.
"This is purely because the win that we had in France was so well priced
in," said Jane Foley, currency strategist with Rabobank in London.
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A man looks at an electronic board showing the stock market indices
of various countries outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan, November
16, 2016. REUTERS/Toru Hanai
The safe-haven Japanese yen, having earlier fallen to a seven-week
low against the dollar, also changed course and was last up 0.1
percent at 112.56 per dollar.
The dollar index, which measures the U.S. currency against a basket
of its major peers, was up 0.2 percent.
The gap between 10-year yields on French and German government bonds
last stood at around 37 basis points, off opening lows around 33
bps.
The gap between yields in Germany and Italy, which faces an election
before May 2018, rose to as high as 183 bps, up 10 bps from the
day's lows.
Yields on lower-rated southern European government debt, seen most
vulnerable to a reduction in the pace or scale of the ECB stimulus
that has suppressed borrowing costs, rose.
OIL FALLS
Oil prices, which hit almost six-month lows last week on worries
about a global glut of crude, edged up on prospects of output cuts
agreed by the OPEC producers group and others could be extended.
Brent futures rose 38 cents to $49.48 a barrel.
Gold, often sought as a bulwark against risk, rose 0.3 percent to
$1,231 an ounce.
Copper prices fell 1.4 percent to four-month lows around $5,015 a
tonne as Chinese trade data showed April imports of the metal dived
30 percent from a month earlier.
(Additional reporting by Hideyuki Sano in Tokyo and Abhinav
Ramnarayan and Ritvik Carvalho in London; Editing by Catherine
Evans)
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