After bruising week, global stocks make fragile gains ahead of U.S. jobs
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[October 04, 2019]
By Josephine Mason
LONDON (Reuters) - Global stocks were
slightly higher on Friday, clawing back some ground lost in their worst
week for months, and safe haven assets rose ahead of a key jobs report
as investors hoped this week's dismal data would trigger more U.S.
interest rate cuts.
Trading overall was subdued after a bruising week for assets considered
riskier in times of economic and political stress following a slew of
week economic data that revealed a slowdown in U.S. manufacturing and
services.
But a fragile optimism emerged that evidence showing the trade war has
dented the world's top economy may spur U.S. President Donald Trump
toward a more conciliatory stance over the dispute with China as
campaigning for next year's election ramps up.
It may also prompt the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates again.
MSCI world equity index, which tracks shares in 47 countries, eked out
small gains, up slightly at 0905 GMT and reversing earlier losses in
Asia as investors looked to a key U.S. job report that could determine
whether the Federal Reserve cuts rates further.
Taking comfort from gains on Wall Street overnight, European bourses
were all higher, with the pan European STOXX 600 and euro-zone benchmark
up 0.2%.
"(The) market has very quickly reversed to the 'bad news is good news'
model and rallied on increased rate cut expectation," said Marija
Veitmane, multi-asset senior strategist at State Street Global Markets.
Still the global index was on track for a 1.8% drop on the week, its
worst in two months, hurt by a drum roll of weak global data, political
uncertainty in the United States and Hong Kong, geopolitical tensions in
the Middle East and Brexit.
Europe, and in particular London's FTSE 100, has lagged the global
market, bearing the brunt of woes from a global manufacturing recession
to growing trade conflicts and uncertainty over the Britain's exit from
the European Union.
On Wednesday, Washington said it would impose 10% tariffs on
European-made Airbus planes <AIR.PA> and 25% duties on European products
such as French wine, as punishment for illegal EU aircraft subsidies,
opening a new front on the global trade spat.
U.S. stock futures were lower, signaling a weaker open later and
reversing a 0.80% increase in the S&P 500 on Wall Street overnight on
hopes that future Fed rate cuts will support corporate profits.
Talks between Beijing and Washington resume next week, aimed at agreeing
a truce over the protracted trade spat between the world's two largest
economies, although hopes of a definitive agreement are pretty low.
Global equities could fall as much as 15-20% if negotiations break down
and Trump follows through with his threat of car imports tariffs, UBS
global chief investment officer Mark Haefele warned on Friday.
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The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock
exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, October 2, 2019. REUTERS/Staff/File
Photo
The Swiss bank reckons there's a 50% probability that additional
duties will be announced by the year-end, potentially pushing global
growth down to 3% next year, the slowest pace since the global
financial crisis.
"Without a resolution to the U.S.-China trade dispute, we see
limited upside for stocks in the near-term, and given the risks of
further escalation we hold a modest tactical underweight on
equities," he said.
SAFE HAVENS
Signs the U.S. economy was losing momentum, and nerves ahead of key
jobs numbers later in the day, sent investors into safe haven asset
such as government bonds and gold.
U.S. nonfarm payrolls data is expected to show the world's top
economy added 145,000 new jobs in September, more than an increase
of 130,000 in the previous month.
Euro-zone government bond yields were lower in early European
trading and spot gold was up 0.3%, on course for a 0.75% weekly
gain.
U.S. Treasury prices fell slightly overnight but two-year
yields,which track expectations for U.S. monetary policy, remained
near the lowest in two years.
The dollar index steadied after hitting a 2-1/2-year high this week.
It was down 0.3% on the week.
Traders see a 85.2% chance the Fed will cut rates by 25 basis points
to 1.75%-2.00% in October, up from 39.6% on Monday, according to CME
Group's FedWatch tool.
The Fed has already cut rates twice this year as policymakers try to
limit the damage caused by the bruising Sino-U.S. trade war.
The dollar edged down to 106.81 yen <JPY=EBS>, close to a one-month
low of 106.48 yen reached on Thursday. The euro <EUR=EBS> was a
shade higher at $1.0974, near a one-week high.
For the week, the dollar was down 1.04% versus the yen and off 0.3%
against the common currency.
U.S. crude <CLc1> rose 0.3% to $52.76 a barrel, while Brent crude
rose 0.7% to $58.11 per barrel. For the week, crude futures were on
course for a steep decline, their worst performance since July 19.
(Additional reporting by Thyagaraju Adinarayan and Marc Jones in
LONDON and Stanley White in TOKYO; Editing by Shri Navaratnam and
Alex Richardson)
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