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		China reserves cut extends risk rally before U.S. jobs data
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		 [September 06, 2019] 
		By Marc Jones 
 LONDON (Reuters) - Stimulus from China 
		capped a strong week for global share markets on Friday, while bond 
		buyers and dollar dealers were waiting for U.S. jobs data after their 
		first significant selloffs in months.
 
 After a roller-coaster week dominated by UK and Italian political drama, 
		Washington and Beijing trade talk, global monetary stimulus and 
		Argentina's imposing capital controls, calm looked to have returned. 
		Then Beijing cut in.
 
 As Chinese markets were closing, the country's central bank said it was 
		slashing the amount of cash that banks must hold as reserves for the 
		third time this year. That released a total of 900 billion yuan ($126.35 
		billion) to shore up the slowing economy.
 
 Europe's pan-region Stoxx 600, London FTSE, Paris CAC 40 and DAX in 
		Frankfurt were all higher, after rising to their highest in more than 
		month on Thursday.
 
 Euro zone bond yields steadied after their worst one-day selloff in more 
		than a year. The euro and pound saw weekly gains after the biggest drop 
		for the dollar in a month.
 
		
		 
		
 "It feels to me like the air is coming out of it a bit," Societe 
		Generale strategist Kit Juckes said, referring to the recent surge in 
		volatility. "So we will see what we get from the payrolls."
 
 The closely watched U.S. non-farm payrolls report due at 1230 GMT was 
		expected to show 158,000 jobs were added in August and the unemployment 
		rate was unchanged at 3.7%.
 
 Surveys on Thursday had suggested the U.S. may be in better shape than 
		investors have been fearing. Services activity accelerated in August and 
		private employers increased hiring more than expected.
 
 Despite the reassuring signs, bond markets still expect the Federal 
		Reserve to cut U.S interest rates this month and a total of 55 basis 
		points of cuts by the end of the year.
 
 Overnight, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan 
		added 0.6%, giving it a 2.4% weekly gain, its best week since mid-June.
 
 United States and China agreed to hold high-level talks early in 
		October, raising hopes for their long trade conflict would be resolved.
 
 The Shanghai Composite Index ended up 0.5% and Hong Kong's Hang Seng 
		rose 0.6%, even though the rating agency Fitch downgraded the city's 
		credit rating after months of unrest.
 
 Australian stocks gained 0.5%, South Korea's KOSPI climbed 0.2% and 
		Japan's Nikkei advanced 0.5%. On Thursday, Wall Street's Dow added 1.4%, 
		the S&P 500 climbed 1.3% and Nasdaq rose 1.75%.
 
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			Signage is seen outside the entrance of the London Stock Exchange in 
			London, Britain. Aug 23, 2018. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls 
            
 
            "The strong U.S. data are the main part of the latest turn in 
			markets as they are key factors impacting equities and U.S. yields, 
			therefore determining how long this 'risk on' phase will last," said 
			Junichi Ishikawa, senior FX strategist at IG Securities in Tokyo.
 The August payrolls report "will get more attention than usual as it 
			could further fuel the risk-on phase, which in turn would boost the 
			dollar," Ishikawa said.
 
 Despite its broader decline, the dollar stood at 107.04 yen after 
			climbing to a one-month high of 107.235 overnight.
 
 The pound rose to $1.23 from the near-six-week peak of $1.2353 it 
			reached after Britain's parliament moved to block a UK departure 
			from the European Union without a transitional agreement. It had 
			fallen to a three-year low of $1.1959 midweek amid threats of a 
			no-deal Brexit.
 
 The euro was steady at $1.1039 after rising 0.5% overnight, when it 
			was helped by the Brexit drama and the sagging dollar.
 
 U.S. Treasuries fell in price and their yields rebounded from 
			multi-year lows as investors moved out of safe assets into equities.
 
 The 10-year Treasury yield was 1.536%, up from a three-year low of 
			1.428% in midweek, when soft economic data and Sino-U.S. trade 
			worries stoked global recession concerns.
 
 "The recent panic in markets was excessive. And if a sustained 
			reversal of fragile sentiment gets under way, U.S. equities will 
			test fresh record highs and a corresponding drop in bond prices will 
			present an good bargain-hunting opportunity," said Eiichiro Tani, 
			chief strategist at Daiwa Securities.
 
 In commodities markets, Brent oil futures were little changed at 
			$60.97 per barrel. Brent had climbed to a one-month peak of $62.40 
			per barrel on Thursday after data showed U.S. crude stockpiles 
			decline and the news about U.S.-China trade talks.
 
 (Additional reporting by Shinichi Saoshiro in Tokyo; editing by 
			Larry King)
 
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