Stocks head for higher ground, oil stuck in a rut
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[April 16, 2020]
By Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - Europe led world stock
markets back to higher ground on Thursday as tentative moves to reopen
parts of the some of its larger coronavirus-hit economies offset some
truly stinking global economic numbers.
Asian equities and U.S. futures had wilted earlier in the day after
warnings of a Great Depression-style slump in the world economy, a
record plunge in U.S. retail sales, oil near an 18-year low [O/R] and
the prospect of a sky high jump in U.S. jobless claims later in the
session.
But the pan-European STOXX 600 index <.STOXX> rose over 1% in early
trade, spurred by a drop in the virus death tolls in both Spain and
Italy and reassuring statements from two of the continent's big budget
airlines about their survival prospects. [.EU]
Wall Street futures <ESc1> recovered, too, and in the currency and bond
markets both the dollar <USD=> and benchmark German Bund and U.S.
Treasury yields shifted higher in the more 'risk-on' mood. [/FRX] [GVD/EUR]
"We have had this big wave of big announcements by governments and
central banks and now we need to get into the nitty gritty of how it all
works," said AXA Investment Managers chief economist Gilles Moec.
"We need to see if it is working, how it is working and if we need to do
more."
Markets may be seizing on the fact that policymakers, however
reluctantly, are starting to allow stringent lockdowns to ease.
Germany is proposing to reopen schools and some retailers starting May
4, while around 20 U.S. states spared the worst of the coronavirus
pandemic may start reopening their economies by President Donald Trump's
May 1 target date.
Firms are looking to restart as well. Volkswagen has said its factories
in Germany and Slovakia will resume some production from April 20 with
others following a week later.
But the economic figures are dire. After the IMF’s forecasts for this
year, markets are expecting China to report on Friday that Q1 GDP
contracted for the first time on record, and hopes for a quick rebound
are fading fast.
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The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock
exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, April 15, 2020. REUTERS/Staff/File
Photo
A Reuters survey showed that most Japanese firms feel stimulus
announced so far are insufficient and Wednesday's U.S. data also
showed manufacturing output there dropping the most in over 74
years.
OIL IN A RUT
Asia had had a difficult day as a result. Tokyo's Nikkei dropped
1.3% and MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan
<.MIAPJ0000PUS> lost almost 1%, wiping out early week gains that had
taken it to a one-month high.
The risk-sensitive Australian dollar <AUD=D3> fell to a one-week low
and oil prices struggled to rise against the expectation of
cratering demand.
U.S. crude <CLc1> sat at $20.22 per barrel, just over $1 above an
18-year low hit on Wednesday, and Brent crude <LCOc1> rose 37 cents
or 1.3% in European trade to $28.02 per barrel.
The International Monetary Fund is predicting zero growth in Asia
this year for the first time in 60 years, as exporters are pounded
by slumping demand and anti-virus measures force consumers to stay
home and shops to shut down.
Benchmark indexes in Australia <.AXJO>, Hong Kong <.HSI> and
Shanghai <.SSEC> also posted falls between 0.4% and 1.3% and some
emerging markets fell harder.
"A recovery timeline...remains impossible to predict," said Ronald
Lam, chief customer officer at airline Cathay Pacific <0293.HK>,
which has slashed nearly all its passenger capacity and lost a fifth
of its value this year.
(Additional reporting by Tom Westbrook in Singapore; Editing by Kim
Coghill)
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