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						Friendly Fed fires world stocks to best January on 
						record
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		 [January 31, 2019]   
		By Marc Jones 
 LONDON (Reuters) - Soothing sounds from the Federal Reserve propelled 
		world stocks to their best January on record on Thursday, although 
		having scored stellar gains this time last year only to flop 
		spectacularly, traders were trying not to get too carried away.
 
 The Fed said it would pause its 3-year interest rate rise campaign while 
		assessing the weakening of the economy.
 
 Crucially, it also said that the rundown of its balance sheet - or the 
		stockpile of bonds it has accumulated over the past 10 years of 
		quantitative easing - could slow too.
 
 That ticked all the boxes for financial markets, and saw Europe's bulls 
		push London, Frankfurt and Paris up 0.7 to 1 percent after Wall Street 
		and then Asia had both charged overnight.
 
 Added together it lifted the $4 trillion MSCI world stocks index, which 
		tracks 47 countries, up 0.5 percent and for the 20th day out of the last 
		23.
 
 For January it is up more than 7.2 percent which is its best January 
		since the index began in 1988 and the best performance in any month 
		since December 2015.
 
		
		 
		
 "The rally really does lift all boats," said Pictet emerging market 
		portfolio manager Guido Chamorro.
 
 The gains were matched in bond markets. Benchmark U.S. Treasury yields, 
		which tend to set the bar for global borrowing costs, had dived 
		significantly and Europe's big move saw Italian 2-year yields hit their 
		lowest since May.
 
 But was all pain for the dollar. It was struggling near a three-week 
		trough against its major peers and emerging market currencies rose 
		almost in unison having been steamrollered by the greenback last year.
 
 "Risk assets are dancing in the streets and the dollar's down in the 
		dumps," Societe Generale strategist Kit Juckes said.
 
 "We may yet get a (Fed) rate hike in June, but if what matters is where 
		policy's heading in the medium term, the FX market would overlook that 
		and sell the dollar anyway."
 
 U.S. stocks were also expected to open higher later after the Fed's 
		boost had dovetailed with reassuring tech earnings on Wednesday, and 
		with Amazon due to report later.
 
 Apple shares had jumped almost 7 percent after it soothed its China 
		worries. Facebook shares then leapt 11 percent after hours after it had 
		reported better-than-expected profits following a year of high profile 
		data scandals.
 
 MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares then rose to its highest 
		since October helped by a 1 percent jump on Japan's Nikkei which 
		shrugged off the normal headwind of a higher yen.
 
		
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            Pedestrians are 
			reflected on an electronic board showing stock prices outside a 
			brokerage in Tokyo, Japan December 27, 2018. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon 
            
			 
The main emerging market index skipped to a more than 8 percent January gain 
while the Shanghai Composite Index climbed 0.3 percent despite data showing 
China's factory activity contracted for a second straight month.
 RE-EMERGING MARKETS
 
 With the Fed decision out of the way, investors focused their attention on a 
pivotal round of high-level U.S.-China trade talks aimed at easing a months-long 
tariff war.
 
 The two-day talks which began in Washington on Wednesday are expected to be 
tense, with little indication so far that Beijing is willing to address core 
U.S. demands to budge on trade practices and fully protect American intellectual 
property rights.
 
 If the two sides cannot reach a deal soon, Washington has threatened to more 
than double tariffs on Chinese goods on March 2.
 
 In the commodity markets, oil prices rose for a third day, pushed up by lower 
imports into the United States amid OPEC efforts to tighten the market, and as 
Venezuela struggles to keep up its crude exports after Washington imposed 
sanctions on the nation.
 
 U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures were at $54.47 per barrel, up 
24 cents, or 0.4 percent, from their last settlement. Brent was up 36 cents, or 
0.6 percent, at $62.01 per barrel.
 
 Back in the currency markets, the pound was a shade higher at $1.3127, while 
gold held near an eight-month high of $1,323 an ounce hit in the previous 
session as its buyers also cheered the weak dollar.
 
 
 "The Fed dropped a commitment to gradual rate hikes from its policy statement 
... U.S dollar's plunge alongside treasury bond yields have burnished the 
relative appeal of gold," said Ilya Spivak, senior currency strategist with 
DailyFx.
 
 (Additional reporting by Abhinav Ramnarayan in London and Nallur Sethuraman in 
Bangalore; Editing by Alison Williams)
 
				 
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