China stimulus hints, slowing spread of virus lift stocks
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[February 19, 2020]
By Sujata Rao
LONDON (Reuters) - A decline in the number
of new coronavirus cases in China and mounting expectations for more
policy stimulus boosted global stock markets on Wednesday, helping ease
some of the alarm caused by an Apple revenue warning.
China posted the lowest daily rise in new coronavirus cases since Jan.
29, helping to lift the offshore-traded yuan to two-week highs against
the dollar and pushing the yen to a one-month low.
Many view Chinese data on the virus with scepticism, but sentiment was
lifted by a Bloomberg report that Beijing was considering cash
injections or mergers to bail out airlines hit by the virus.
Those steps would come after this week's cut in the medium-term lending
rate, which has fed expectations for a reduction in the benchmark loan
prime rate.
A pan-European equity index rose 0.4% to test recent record highs and
futures indicated a stronger open for Wall Street. Earlier, an MSCI
index of Asian shares outside Japan rose 0.5%. Japan's Nikkei index
gained almost 1%, helped by the yen's retreat.
Chinese mainland shares closed in the red, however.
Edward Park, chief investment officer at Brooks Macdonald, cited
President Xi Jinping's latest commitment to meeting 2020 growth targets.
"This in itself implies there will be more fiscal and monetary
stimulus," Park said. "That's the real carrot for markets today."
Tuesday's U.S. Empire manufacturing survey also reassured investors the
world's biggest economy was in good shape, he said. That somewhat
tempered worries caused by Apple's warning it might miss sales targets
because of pressure on its supply chains.
Market fears still kept gold trading above $1,600 an ounce and U.S.
10-year Treasury yields some 35 basis points below where they started
2020.
"There is some nervousness that economic data outside the United States
is not amazing," Park said.
China, the world's second-largest economy, is struggling to get
manufacturing back online after severe travel restrictions were imposed
to contain the coronavirus. Japanese exports fell for the 14th straight
month in January, data showed.
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The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock
exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, February 18, 2020.
REUTERS/Staff/File Photo
Growth worries were reflected in a dismal German investor sentiment
survey and the U.S. Treasury curve, where yields on three-month
bills rose above yields on 10-year notes -- an inversion that's been
a fairly reliable recession predictor in the past.
The yield on three-month bills stood at 1.5949%, above the 10-year
yield of 1.5661%.
Investors are waiting to see what other growth-supportive measures
could be introduced, particularly in the euro zone. They will also
keep an eye on the minutes from the U.S. Federal Reserve's last
meeting.
The Fed has signaled that it's keeping an eye on the coronavirus
impact but has no intention of cutting interest rates anytime soon.
Many analysts reckon it could be forced to change its mind.
"Given the risks we see to both growth and inflation falling short
of expectations this year, we still expect the Fed’s view on the
need for additional rate cuts to shift later this year," NatWest
analysts told clients, adding they were "not at this time removing
rate cuts from our forecast."
But the contrast between euro zone and U.S. economic indicators are
weighing on the euro, which has reached a three-year low versus the
dollar, though it rose back above the $1.08 level it breached on
Tuesday for the first time since 2017.
Brent crude futures rose around 0.7% to $58.12 a barrel, as a
reduction in supply from Libya offset concerns about weaker Chinese
demand.
(Additional reporting by Stanley White in Tokyo; editing by Larry
King)
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