Stocks slip, dollar drifts after Fed
cools rate cut bets
Send a link to a friend
[May 02, 2019]
By Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - The dollar nursed
overnight gains while Europe's share markets struggled early on, after
the U.S. central bank dampened bets that it might be readying its first
interest rate cut in years.
Oil and metals markets added to the pressure on stocks on Thursday with
traders sending copper to a 2-month low and using news of record U.S.
oil production to cash in some of Brent crude's near 33 percent rise
this year.
Europe's basic resource stocks led the downward shift in equities with a
1.4 percent drop to their lowest since late March. Continental Europe
was also trying to get back up to speed having been shut for holidays on
Wednesday. [.EU]
There was the Fed’s signals too. For all the intense political pressure
to ease policy and the mixed growth/inflation data, the U.S. central
bank held the line on Wednesday and refused to signal anything other
than it was still on pause.
The dollar index drifted around 97.600 against its set of major currency
peers after going as high as 97.728 and hovering around $1.1211 to the
euro and $1.30 to Britain's pound with the Bank of England set to keep
its rates on hold later.
Although the Fed made the predicted 5 basis point cut to the interest it
pays on banks’ excess reserves – a technical move to ease money market
tightness as it runs down its balance sheet - chairman Jerome Powell was
unwavering on the rate outlook and said the recent relapse in inflation
rates was likely temporary.
"The market has gotten perhaps ahead of itself in quite confidently
pricing in (U.S) interest rate cuts," said Michael Metcalfe, head of
global macro strategy at State Street Global Markets.
"Powell was quite dismissive of the latest downturn in inflation...
which I think has caused the market to reassess that a little bit."
Core European government bond yields also shuffled higher, tracking the
rise in U.S. Treasuries after the Fed's message.
TRADE HOPES
Asia trading had been thinned by holidays in Japan and China but Hong
Kong and Korea's stocks gained after CNBC reported the U.S. and China
could announce a long-awaited trade deal by May 10, as Chinese Vice
Premier Liu He heads to Washington.
[to top of second column]
|
The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock
exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, April 29, 2019. REUTERS/Staff
Though now expected by markets if confirmed, it would remove
significant uncertainty that has weighed on markets and global data
for a year now.
"I would still expect some relief rally once the deal gets done. The
question is how big that move might be," State Street GM's Metcalfe
added.
Elsewhere Turkey's lira remained under pressure near the 6 per
dollar mark after data there had showed manufacturing activity
contracting for the 13th month in a row. Euro zone factory activity
also contracted for a third straight month.
"Demand shortages were again evident in the Turkish manufacturing
sector in April, while currency weakness led to inflationary
pressures building again," said Andrew Harker, associate director of
IHS Markit.
In commodities markets, the drop in oil prices came after U.S. crude
production output set a new record, though the losses were capped by
the intensifying crisis in Venezuela and the stopping of Iranian oil
sanction waivers by Washington. [O/R]
U.S. crude was last off 27 cents at $63.32 a barrel while Brent
slipped 33 cents to $71.86. Copper was at a two month low after a
heavy tumble on Wednesday, while spot gold was marginally weaker at
$1,271.55 an ounce.
(Additional reporting by Vidya Ranganathan; Editing by Sam Holmes
and Jon Boyle)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|