Bullet dodged? Markets bet global recession averted
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[November 05, 2019]
By Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - World shares climbed
back toward record highs on Tuesday, as hopes that Washington may roll
back some of the tariffs it has imposed on Chinese imports rekindled
optimism on the global economic outlook.
A year-end rally looked to be building. Wall Street is on course for its
best year since 2013, with gains of more than 20%, and MSCI’s
all-country index just 1.5% shy of its record peak after advancing for a
ninth day in 10.
Europe's main markets saw a comparatively subdued start, after reaching
a 21-month high on Monday [.EU], but Asia raced to its highest in
six-months, China's yuan climbed above 7 per dollar and global bond
yields were rising again.
Hopes of a trade truce between the United States and China this month
fueled the optimism, with some more details being filled in on what’s
expected to be a "phase one" agreement.
As part of this agreement, China is pushing U.S. President Donald Trump
to remove more tariffs imposed in September, according to overnight
reports. Beijing and Washington spoke of progress in the talks and U.S.
Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said licenses for U.S. companies to sell
components to China's telecoms giant Huawei will come "very shortly".
"The big picture is that everyone is now setting themselves up for the
strong rebound case (for the global economy)," said Peter Garnry, Saxo
Bank's head of global equities . "And with the flood gates open for
monetary policy, assets are just flying, especially equities."
Global readings of the October manufacturing business surveys showed the
aggregate ticked up for the third month in a row last month to show an
expansion in factory activity.
Forward-looking indicators from the survey, such as the new- orders
component, moved into positive territory for the first time since April,
according to JPMorgan.
It all helped ease concern in bond markets about recession risks facing
the global economy, sparking a selloff across major bond markets. The
10-year U.S. Treasury yield rose 4 basis points to around 1.83%
<US10YT=RR> and the U.S. yield curve -- measuring the gap between two-
and 10-year yields -- was at its steepest in three months
<US2US10=TWEB>. In Europe, 10-year yields on safe-haven German Bunds
also climbed to their highest since July <DE10YT=RR>.
In Asia, the mood was also helped by the People's Bank of China cut in
its a medium-term lending rate, the first since early 2016. It was only
a token 5 basis points to 3.25%, but analysts said it underscored
Beijing's ongoing desire to support its economy.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan
<.MIAPJ0000PUS> gained 0.5% to reach levels last seen in early May. It
was led by gains in Chinese shares <.CSI300>, which jumped 1.3% to their
highest levels since late April.
Taiwanese shares <.TWII> gained 0.4% to near three-decade highs and
Japan's Nikkei <.N225> rose 1.34% to a one-year peak after a market
holiday on Monday.
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That followed record closing highs for the U.S. S&P 500, Dow Jones
and Nasdaq and after the Financial Times had reported that the U.S
was considering rolling back levies on $112 billion of Chinese
imports, which were introduced at a 15% rate on Sept. 1.
China is pushing U.S. President Donald Trump to remove more tariffs
as part of a U.S.-China trade deal, expected to be signed later this
month, people familiar with the negotiations said on Monday.
"There may have been some expectations that the U.S. may postpone
the remaining tariffs, which are due to kick in on Dec. 15. But if
it goes further by rolling back existing tariffs, that would not
only benefit the economy but would also make the truce seem more
permanent," said Yukino Yamada, senior strategist at Daiwa
Securities.
The next focus on the U.S. economic front is a U.S.
non-manufacturing survey due later on Tuesday, with economists
expecting a rebound in business sentiment from a three-year low.
Saxo Bank's Garnry said a better-than-expected reading could fire
markets higher.
YUAN RECLAIMS KEY LEVEL
In the currency market, the dollar gained 0.2% on the yen to 108.80
<JPY=>, extending its recovery from the 107.89 touched on Friday.
Trade optimism kept the Chinese yuan near its highest levels since
mid-August, after the onshore yuan posted its strongest close since
Aug. 2. <CNY=CFXS>.
The euro was little changed at $1.1126 <EUR=>, off last week's high
of $1.1175. The Australian dollar gained 0.2% to $0.6900 <AUD=D4> on
the trade hopes and after the nation's central bank held interest
rates steady after three cuts this year.
Oil prices gained, staying near their highest since late September,
buoyed by an improved outlook for crude demand as
better-than-expected U.S. jobs growth added to the hopes for a
U.S.-China trade deal.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude <CLc1> traded at $56.62 per
barrel, up 0.14% after reaching a six-week high of $57.43 on Monday.
International benchmark Brent <LCOc1> gained 0.23% to $62.27 per
barrel.
Rising economic optimism dented gold, which fell 0.47% to $1,503 per
ounce <XAU=>.
(Additional reporting by Hideyuki Sano in Tokyo and Dhara Ranasinghe
in London; editing by Larry King)
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