Investors charge back into stocks on signs coronavirus
spread is slowing
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[February 12, 2020] By
Sujata Rao
LONDON (Reuters) - A drop in the number of
new coronavirus cases and the Federal Reserve chairman's optimistic view
of the economy lifted world stocks for a third day on Wednesday and
sparked a 2% rally in oil prices, on hopes the epidemic's effects would
be contained.
China reported its lowest number of new coronavirus cases since late
January, lending weight to a prediction from its senior medical adviser
that the outbreak might be over by April.
Those reports encouraged investors to get back into equities at the
expense of bonds, gold and the Japanese yen -- safe-haven assets that
benefited as the virus death toll mounted.
"If you look at the share indexes and other risky assets it seems like
people now believe all will be okay with the coronavirus situation,"
said Francois Savary, chief investment officer at Swiss wealth manager
Prime Partners.
MSCI's global equity index rose 0.2% to stand just off Tuesday's record
highs <.MIWD00000PUS>. A pan-European equity index rose to a record <.STOXX>
as automobile stocks -- which depend on exports to China -- jumped 1.2%
<.SXAP>.
Futures indicated Wall Street would extend gains from Tuesday, when the
S&P 500 and Nasdaq posted record closing highs <ESC1> [.N].
Riskier, higher-yielding bonds also rallied. Yields on 10-year Greek
governments bonds slipped under 1% for the first time ever <GR10YT=RR>.
Earlier, mainland Chinese shares rose almost 1% <.CSI300> and the
offshore-traded yuan reached two-week highs <CNH=D3>. Currencies such as
the Thai baht and Korean won, reliant on Chinese tourism and trade,
gained 0.3% to 0.5% <THB=> <KRW=> <TWD=>.
But the yen slipped 0.3% <JPY=EBS> to a three-week low against the
dollar.
Brent crude futures rose from 13-month lows <LCOc1>, though they are
still down almost 20% from their peak in early January.
Many analysts caution against complacency over the economic fallout.
Some Chinese firms have reported job cuts caused by damage to
manufacturing supply chains.
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An investor monitors share market prices in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia,
August 25, 2015. REUTERS/Olivia Harris.
Savary at Prime Partners agreed, noting the dollar is near four-month highs,
10-year U.S. yields are some 30 basis points below early-January levels and
demand for Swiss francs is high.
"Investors are not completely convinced the coronavirus is under control ...
they are trying to hedge their equity bets by taking exposure to safe-havens at
the same time," he said.
U.S. RESILIENCE
Yields on U.S. Treasuries and German Bunds <US10YT=RR> rose around 2 basis
points. Ten-year U.S. yields are now 12 bps off the four-and-a-half-month lows
reached in late January.
Yields rose on Tuesday after U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the
U.S. economy was "resilient". Powell also said he was monitoring the coronavirus,
because it could lead to disruptions that affect the global economy.
The dollar rose to four-month highs against a basket of currencies <.DXY>, then
slipped on Wednesday.
U.S. markets also got a boost from signs President Donald Trump might be
re-elected in November, since centrist candidates for the Democratic nomination
appear to be struggling.
"Trump had a great start into the U.S. election season. After the early end of
the impeachment trial in the Senate and the Iowa caucus chaos for the Democrats,
betting markets suggest that Trump has a 58% probability of winning re-election
on 3 November," Berenberg said.
The day's big currency mover was the New Zealand dollar <NZD=D3>, which rose
0.8% for its best daily gain since December, after the central bank dropped a
reference to further rate cuts, suggesting its easing cycle might be over.
(Additional reporting by Stanley White in Tokyo, editing by Larry King)
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