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						Trade war caution takes edge off stellar rally in world 
						stocks
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		 [November 08, 2019]  By 
		Julien Ponthus and Dhara Ranasinghe 
 LONDON (Reuters) - Uncertainty about the 
		fate of U.S./China trade talks nudged world stock markets off 21-month 
		highs on Friday after what has proved to be stellar week for risk 
		assets.
 
 An agreement between the United States and China to roll back existing 
		tariffs as part of a 'phase one' trade deal faces fierce internal 
		opposition at the White House, sources familiar with the talks told 
		Reuters.
 
 After the blue-chip Dow and broader S&P 500 reached record closing highs 
		on Thursday amid hopes of a trade war truce, U.S. stock futures pointed 
		to a flat to slightly softer start for Wall Street shares.
 
 Caution appeared to be the order of the day across world markets.
 
 The pan-European STOXX 600 dipped 0.2%, nudging off more than four-year 
		highs hit on Thursday. Asian shares retreated from six-month highs and 
		MSCI's world stock index edged off 21-month peaks.
 
		
		 
		
 "The trade deal is the predominant driver", for markets at the moment 
		said Lars Kreckel, global equity strategist at Legal & General 
		Investment Management, noting that a dip in stock markets was a just 
		knee-jerk reaction to the latest news on the U.S.-China front.
 
 The mood contrasts with Thursday's surge of optimism in global markets 
		on news Beijing and Washington had agreed to roll back tariffs as part 
		of a first phase of a trade deal.
 
 Worries the pact could fall apart are now prompting some investors to 
		sell heading into the weekend.
 
 "Perhaps we do get the phase one deal and a detente, but when we get 
		into next year there will be big issues that both the U.S. and China 
		have big disagreements on," said James Rossiter, head of global macro 
		strategy at TD Securities.
 
 "If anything, markets realize that it will take more of a formal process 
		to get things going and make progress."
 
 Germany's DAX, a gauge of investors' sentiment on trade, was also a 
		touch lower on the day.
 
 German exports posted their biggest rise in almost two years in 
		September, data showed on Friday, providing some relief amid widespread 
		concern that Europe's largest economy will dip into recession in the 
		third quarter.
 
		
		 
		
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			A financial trader works at their desk at CMC Markets in the City of 
			London, Britain, April 11, 2019. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls 
            
			 
"Market participants are getting increasingly 'long' on good news", said Stephen 
Gallo, European head of FX strategy at Canadian bank BMO.
 "The 'payback' in risk assets for a very downbeat picture earlier in the year 
looks unstoppable at the moment", he added.
 
BOND BEATING
 Sovereign bond markets steadied after taking a beating this week from U.S./China 
trade talk optimism.
 
 The U.S. 10-year Treasury yield stood at 1.92%, down from three-month highs hit 
on Thursday. Still, it is up 19 basis points this week and set for its biggest 
weekly rise in a month.
 
 Safe-haven German Bund yields were also set for their biggest weekly rise in a 
month.
 
 Crude oil futures meanwhile fell amid lingering uncertainty over the 
long-awaited trade deal and rising crude inventories in the United States.
 
 At 1150 GMT, Brent crude was down 1.7% at $61.21 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas 
Intermediate crude also tumbled 1.7%, to $56.19.
 
 In currency markets, the dollar edged up against other major currencies.
 
 The greenback was a touch firmer at 109.40 yen, nearing a five-month high of 
109.49 set the previous day.
 
 
The euro was 0.2% weaker at $1.10285, while the dollar index hovered at 
three-week highs.
 A Reuters poll found that the dollar's persistent strength would continue well 
into next year.
 
 (This story fixes typo in headline)
 
 (Reporting by Julien Ponthus, Dhara Ranasinghe, and Sujata Rao; editing by 
Philippa Fletcher)
 
				 
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