Shares jump as investors cheer lockdown easing, more
stimulus
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[April 27, 2020] By
Tommy Wilkes
LONDON (Reuters) - Stock markets rallied on
Monday as investors cheered news more countries were easing lockdowns
and the Bank of Japan expanded stimulus to cushion the impact of the
coronavirus, though the oil price took another tumble with storage
running out.
The Bank of Japan matched market speculation by pledging to buy
unlimited amounts of government bonds and sharply raising purchases of
corporate and commercial debt, the latest in a raft of vast central bank
stimulus announcements that have helped propel a near 25% rally in
global stock markets.
The Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank meet later in the
week. Analysts do not expect many new big announcements but the ECB is
predicted to increase the size of its bond buying programme.
"It's central bank week and investor sentiment is on a firm footing,"
said Stephen Gallo, European Head of FX Strategy at BMO Capital Markets.
"This is purely a case of 'don't fight the central banks'," he added.
The Euro STOXX 600 rose 1.64%, following on from decent gains on Asian
markets. Germany's DAX rose 2.49%, France's CAC 40 1.88% and Britain's
FTSE 100 1.45%.
Wall Street also looked set to open higher, with S&P futures 0.95%
ahead.
The MSCI world equity index, which tracks shares in 49 countries, rose
0.77%. The index is now up 25% from its low on March 23, but is still
more than 20% off the highs in February, before panic over the virus
triggered a market rout.
For a graphic on MSCI world equity index, click
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/mkt/gjnvwegqavw/world%20stocks.PNG
After more than a month of lockdowns, countries are gradually moving to
ease restrictions, believing the peak of the virus infection rate has
passed.
More U.S. states are preparing to ease curbs on commerce despite health
experts warning that there is still too little testing in place, while
European countries further eased their restrictions.
Italy's prime minister announced on Sunday that factories and building
sites could reopen from May 4 and family visits would be permitted, as
the country prepares a staged end to Europe's longest lockdown.
The British prime minister, by contrast, said on Monday it was too risky
for the country to relax its lockdown.
In a busy week for corporate earnings around 173 companies in the S&P
500 will report, including Apple, Amazon, Facebook, Microsoft,
Caterpillar, Ford, General Electric and Chevron.
Analysts expect a 15% decline in S&P 500 first-quarter earnings, with
profits for the energy sector estimated to have slumped more than 60%,
raising fears of debt defaults.
Many European companies are reporting too, and better-than-expected
earnings from Germany's Deutsche Bank helped lift sentiment on Monday.
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The London Stock Exchange Group offices are seen in the City of
London, Britain, December 29, 2017. REUTERS/Toby Melville
The United States and European Union both release first-quarter economic growth
numbers this week, while the influential U.S. ISM manufacturing survey is also
due.
But not everyone thinks the current crop of data is as relevant for markets,
which have recently shrugged off huge rises in jobless claims to focus on how
quickly economies will rebound as government-imposed lockdowns are lifted.
"I don't know why people pay so much attention to today's data. We know it's all
bad. The new information will come in the summer," said Stephen Jen, co-founder
of hedge fund Eurizon SLJ Capital.
He said the "tug of war" between those predicting a sharp V-shaped rebound and
those expecting a slower recovery would not begin in earnest until May's data
gave a picture of how economies were responding once lockdown measures have
eased.
OIL DROPS, ITALY GETS REPRIEVE
Oil prices weakened sharply.
Crude prices have fallen in eight of the last nine weeks as demand collapsed due
to the pandemic and supply cuts failed to keep up, leaving the world awash with
oil and storage space running out. [O/R]
U.S. crude slid more than 17%, or $2.90 to $11.34, while Brent crude futures
slipped 4.76% to $20.42 a barrel.
The gold price fell 0.61% to $1,717 per ounce as investors shifted away from the
safe-haven metal into riskier assets.
Italian government bond yields dropped between 13 and 17 basis points after S&P
Global late on Friday left the country's credit rating in investment grade
territory.
Investors had feared the ratings agency would cut heavily-indebted Italy to
'junk'.
Benchmark German 10-year bond yields were little changed, while U.S. Treasury
yields rose.
The U.S. dollar fell as the broader upbeat mood encouraged investors to move
back into other currencies.
The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of currencies,
dropped 0.4% to a one-week low of 99.84.
The euro gained 0.4% to $1.0857, while sterling strengthened 0.4% and the
Japanese yen firmed a similar amount, hitting its strongest since April 15.
(Editing by Jan Harvey and Alex Richardson)
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