Shares gain as Wall Street record outweighs jitters over
growth
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[August 19, 2020] By
Tom Wilson
LONDON (Reuters) - European shares gained
ground on Wednesday as a record high on Wall Street outweighed simmering
worries over a resurgence in coronavirus cases that could undermine a
nascent recovery.
The broad Euro STOXX 600 added 0.3% in choppy trading, with indexes in
Frankfurt and London gaining similar amounts.
Among the bright spots were travel and leisure shares, with British
Airways-owner up 2.4% on a British plan to use COVID-19 testing at
London's Heathrow Airport to help cut the number of days travellers have
to spend in quarantine.
But oil and gas and utilities shares weighed, with BP and Royal Dutch
Shell losing around 0.7% as crude prices fell on worries over demand and
rising COVID-19 cases in Europe.
Earlier, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside of Japan
fell 0.2%, retreating from a seven-month high reached after the S&P
500's record, powered by looser monetary policy and charging tech
stocks.
Wall Street futures pointed to slim gains.
Strategists said the jittery mood in both Europe and Asia was
symptomatic of a growing focus for investors on where to put money
before a coronavirus vaccine is found.
Money has poured into U.S. growth stocks - the tech giants and retail
titans that have benefited most from the recovery - as investors worry
that, in the absence of a vaccine, a rise in coronavirus cases could
further hurt "value" shares.
"It's hands down the biggest dilemma out there at the moment," said Mike
Bell, global market strategist at J.P. Morgan Asset Management.
"If you get a vaccine, you are going to see a big rotation out of the
stocks that have done very well this year - the growth stocks, the tech
stocks - into the beaten-up value stocks - the hotels, the airlines."
Overnight, U.S. stocks set records as investors gravitated to the
stay-at-home winners from COVID-19 lockdowns, such as Amazon and Netflix.
The benchmark S&P 500 surpassed its February all-time high, hit just
before the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic pummelled stocks to lows on
March 23.
It has surged about 55% since those lows, fuelled by monetary stimulus
packages even as alarm bells ring over the underlying health of the
economy and as negotiations over fiscal stimulus in Washington drag on.
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A man wearing a face mask is seen inside the Shanghai Stock Exchange
building, as the country is hit by a novel coronavirus outbreak, at
the Pudong financial district in Shanghai, China February 28, 2020.
REUTERS/Aly Song
The MSCI world equity index, which tracks shares in 49 countries, gained 0.1%.
DOLLAR FLOORED
The U.S. Federal Reserve's intervention in financial markets to maintain
liquidity has pushed riskier assets to all-time highs and reduced demand for
safe-havens, battering the U.S. dollar.
The greenback clawed away from a 27-month low touched overnight, gaining 0.1%
against a basket of currencies to 92.259.
"The U.S. dollar left the building overnight," said Jeffrey Halley, senior
market analyst at Oanda, citing the prospect for further loosening of policy by
the Federal Reserve as the trigger.
Markets were also awaiting minutes from the Fed's recent meeting due later in
the day for any hints on what the Fed could announce in September.
"We are expecting a clear dovish message from the Fed in September," MUFG
analysts wrote in a note.
Brent crude futures fell 35 cents, or 0.8%, to $45.11 a barrel, on concerns that
U.S. fuel demand may not recover as quickly as expected amid stalled talks on an
economic stimulus package. [O/R]
For Reuters Live Markets blog on European and UK stock markets, please click on:
[LIVE/]
Graphic: 2020 asset performance
http://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/rngs/COMMODITIES-ASSETS/010031B62XZ/
index.html#section/assets
Graphic: World FX rates in 2020
http://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/rngs/GLOBAL-CURRENCIES-PERFORMANCE/
0100301V041/index.html
(Reporting by Tom Wilson; Editing by Alison Williams and Jan Harvey)
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