Dramatic stock market rally runs out of stream
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[December 27, 2018]
By Abhinav Ramnarayan
LONDON (Reuters) - A global equity rally
fueled by a dramatic surge on Wall Street ran out of steam on Thursday,
setting U.S. shares up for a weak opening after a fall in Chinese
industrial profits offered a reminder of the pressures on the world
economy.
Still, world stocks stayed off near two-year lows, lifted by Wednesday's
1,000 point-plus surge on the U.S. Dow Jones index which was triggered
partly by the strongest holiday sales in years.
Stocks in Asia and Europe initially took their cue from this rally,
pushing the MSCI world index, which tracks shares in 47 countries, 0.4
percent higher, adding to a 2.3 percent spike on Wednesday, when the
previous session, rising off a 22-month low hit on Christmas Eve.
But the gains halved by 1130 GMT as a pan-European equity index fell 1.1
percent after a strong open and export-reliant German shares lost 2
percent. Equity futures for the Dow Jones index fell 1.5 percent while
Nasdaq and S&P500 appeared set for even weaker openings.
"Yesterday was a blowout day for U.S. equity markets which triggered
optimism that this could be a key reversal day but the upward momentum
has not really followed through into Asia and Europe," said Lee Hardman,
an analyst at MUFG in London.
"One reason is that maybe the sharp move higher was driven by year-end
rebalancing, which exaggerated the scale of the rebound, and now we have
reverted to the trend which has been in place most of this month."
While Japanese and Australian shares rose strongly, markets in mainland
China as well as Hong Kong closed 0.4 percent weaker after data showed
earnings at China's industrial firms dropped in November for the first
time in nearly three years.
A Reuters report added to the gloom around the world's second-biggest
economy, saying the White House was considering barring U.S. firms from
buying telecoms equipment from China's Huawei and ZTE.
That overshadowed positive noises from the U.S. government on trade
talks with Beijing, its efforts to temper the White House's recent
broadsides against the Federal Reserve and a Mastercard Inc report that
U.S. holiday shopping sales had risen the most in six years in 2018.
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Pedestrians talk in front of an electronic board showing Nikkei
share average outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan December 27, 2018.
REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
"So far, we don’t see a shift in fundamentals. Trade tensions between the U.S.
and China remain the biggest unknown factor for 2019," said Hussein Sayed, a
strategist at online brokerage FXTM.
There were also renewed concerns in Italy, where troubled lender Banca Carige
was denied a cash call by its largest shareholder, pushing its shares down 12.5
percent.
OIL IS NOT WELL
The concerns over a faltering global economy and signs of a crude oil glut
pressured oil prices, sending Brent futures 1.7 percent lower to $53.5 a barrel
and partly reversing Wednesday's 8 percent jump.
That rise was triggered by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
(OPEC) and its allies, including Russia, agreeing to limit output by 1.2 million
barrels per day (bpd).
U.S. Treasury yields also reversed direction after rising sharply on Wednesday,
dropping three basis points to 2.765 percent.
Another safe-haven, gold, was up 0.4 percent, remaining just below a six-month
peak hit earlier this week.
Investors also bought yen, pushing the dollar 0.4 percent lower versus the
Japanese currency and forcing it to cede some of its 1 percent overnight rise.
Against a basket of currencies it was down 0.3 percent.
"We have started to see the yen regain its place as the safe haven of choice,"
MUFG's Hardman said.
(Reporting by Abhinav Ramnarayan; additional reporting by Sujata Rao; Editing by
Toby Chopra and Gareth Jones)
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