World shares inch up on Chinese support measures
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[February 17, 2020] By
Ritvik Carvalho
LONDON (Reuters) - Global shares inched
higher on Monday as the promise of further policy stimulus from China to
counteract the economic hit from a coronavirus outbreak calmed nervous
investors.
Trading is expected to be light, with U.S. stocks and bond markets shut
for a public holiday.
Both the pan-European STOXX 600 index and Germany's DAX reached record
highs before paring some gains. [.EU] The MSCI All-Country World Index,
which tracks shares across 47 countries, was up 0.01% by midday.
In Asia, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan
advanced 0.14% to near last week's peak of 558.30, its highest since
late January.
The gains were led by China, whose blue-chip index climbed 2.25% after
the country's central bank lowered a key interest rates and injected
more liquidity into the system.
Also whetting risk appetite was an announcement by China's finance
minister on Sunday that Beijing would roll out tax and fee cuts.
"Traders are mindful of the fact the Chinese authorities intervened in
the financial markets at the beginning of the month when the domestic
stock markets reopened after the Lunar New Year celebrations," said
David Madden, market analyst at CMC Markets in London.
"Some dealers hold the view that Beijing will intervene in the markets
again should the situation get much worse, which could explain the
resilience of equity markets."
Fears about the jolt to the world economy from the coronavirus lingered,
though, as the number of reported new cases in China rose to 2,048 as on
Sunday from 2,009 the previous day.
"The latest numbers from the Hubei province still suggest that the
infection pace is slowing after the sudden jump following the
methodology changes last week," Danske Bank said in a research note,
highlighting that the number of new cases within China is the lowest
since 23 January.
Restrictions were tightened further in Hubei over the weekend. Most
vehicles were banned from the roads and companies told to stay shut
until further notice.
Japan's Nikkei fell 0.7% after its economy shrank at the fastest pace in
almost six years in the December quarter. The slowdown in the world's
third-largest economy came amid concern the coronavirus effects will
hurt output and tourism, stoking fears Japan may slump into recession.
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The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock
exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, February 14, 2020.
REUTERS/Staff/File Photo
The coronavirus also led trade-dependent Singapore to downgrade its 2020
economic growth forecast. China's economy is widely expected to slow sharply as
well.
BULL RUN
South Korea's KOSPI index ended mostly flat. Australian, Singapore and Malaysian
share indexes weakened.
Asia's woes have yet to spread to the United States, though. Wall Street indexes
scaled record highs. [.N]
Talk of a middle class tax cut and a proposal to encourage Americans to invest
in stocks boosted equity markets late last week, Betashares chief economist
David Bassanese said.
Bassanese had misgivings about the plan, saying it reminded him of former U.S.
President George Bush encouraging Americans to buy a home during a housing boom.
"It adds to my suspicion that this decade-long bull market could eventually end
via a blow-off bubble, driven by central bank persistent low interest rate
policy," he said in a note.
Later in the week, flash manufacturing activity data for February are due for
the euro zone, the United Kingdom and the United States. They are likely to
capture some of the early impact of the viral epidemic.
Action was relatively muted in currency markets, with the dollar up against the
yen at 109.88 and the pound at $1.3015. It gained against the euro to $1.0839.
The risk-sensitive Aussie, which is also played as a liquid proxy for Chinese
assets, ticked up 0.1% to $0.6719.
That left the dollar index flat at 99.135.
In commodities, gold fell 0.25% to $1,580.51 an ounce. [GOL/] Brent crude was
lower by 0.1% at $57.27 a barrel and U.S. crude added 0.1% to $52.09. [O/R]
(Reporting by Ritvik Carvalho; additional reporting by Asia markets team;
editing by Larry King)
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