World stocks ease off record highs, Fed
rate hopes boost dollar
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[May 12, 2017]
LONDON (Reuters) - Global stocks
paused near record highs as worries over China's banking system provided
an excuse for investors to lock in some profits. The dollar was set for
its best week of the year on bets the Federal Reserve will raise U.S.
interest rates in June.
A dip on Wall Street overnight on signs of weak consumer spending and
waning enthusiasm over the recovery in European corporate earnings has
put MSCI's gauge of world stock markets on track for its first weekly
loss in four.
"We've had a nervous twitch about China, over this week," said Sean
Darby, chief global equity strategist at Jefferies. "We've had a bit
more of a regulatory overhang coming through in the financial system."
China's banking regulator this week launched emergency risk assessments
of lenders' new business practices, sources told Reuters, as Beijing
extends its crackdown on shadow banking.
With corporate earnings seasons in the U.S. and Europe drawing to a
close investors, focus is likely to shift back to central banks,
particularly in the United States, where inflation pressures are
growing.
U.S. data on Thursday showed producer prices rebounded more than
expected last month, leading to the biggest annual gain in five years.
Combined with a tightening labor market, firming inflation backs market
expectations that the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates at its
meeting next month. The central bank has forecast two more increases
this year after raising rates a quarter of a point in March.
The stronger fundamentals in the U.S. helped offset uneasiness over
political turmoil after President Donald Trump abruptly fired FBI chief
James Comey.
The dollar index, which tracks the currency against a basket of six
major rivals, was flat on the day at 99.622 <.DXY>, but was up 1 percent
for the week.
Sterling was steady on the day at $1.2886 <GBP=> after dropping to a
one-week low on Thursday following the Bank of England's decision to
keep interest rates unchanged. Policymakers indicated that rates were
unlikely to rise until late 2019.
In Europe, stock markets steadied this week. Company profits are
expected to grow 20 percent in the first quarter, the best corporate
results in a decade, according to Morgan Stanley.
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Visitors looks at an electronic board showing the Japan's Nikkei
average at the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE) in Tokyo, Japan, February
9, 2016. REUTERS/Issei Kato/Files
Their outperformance this year against global peers remains intact,
with the benchmark's <.STOXX> 10 percent gains outpacing the 7
percent rise on the S&P 500 <.SPX>.
Greek stocks <.ATG> snapped a their longest winning streak in two
decades.
"European stocks are still in the sweet spot of basking in the
removal of political risk in Europe for the time being, though it is
somewhat ironic that we could see a modest decline on the week as
investors take stock," said Michael Hewson, chief markets analyst at
CMC Markets.
Yields for the euro zone's weaker borrowers, such as Italy, Portugal
and Spain, were all also 1 to 3 basis points lower as investors
awaited announcements of the volumes for expected bond sales next
week by France and Spain.
Oil prices held recent gains as traders expected OPEC-led production
cuts to extend beyond the middle of this year and as U.S. crude
inventories fell to their lowest levels since February.
International Brent crude futures <LCOc1> were at $50.78 per barrel.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures <CLc1> were at $47.85 per
barrel, both little changed on the day.
(Reporting by Vikram Subhedar, editing by Larry King)
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