China charges on, gold reaches nine-year high
Send a link to a friend
[July 09, 2020]
By Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - European shares were
rising again after a two-day wobble on Thursday as China's markets
continued their charge, and something between fear and greed propelled
gold to a nine-year high.
Chinese stocks set their longest winning streak in two years and the
yuan had strengthened past 7 per dollar overnight [.SS], despite rising
tension over Hong Kong and the economic uncertainty caused by COVID-19.
It was the Shenzhen blue-chip index's eighth straight day of gains,
adding another 1.5% to its 16% surge this month, and pushed Europe in
the right direction after some hesitation caused by uninspiring German
data.
Also improving risk sentiment was the dollar’s downward momentum – it
was at a one-month low against the euro, a three- week low versus the
British pound and four-month lows against the Swiss franc.

That was a green light for emerging markets too. MSCI's EM currency
index was at a one-month high. Trade- and commodity- related currencies
also reacted to China's gains. The New Zealand dollar was at the highest
since January and the Aussie dollar at a one-month high.
"We've seen a more generalised view back to riskier assets. The Chinese
equity surge has been the poster child for risk-on move across the last
few sessions," said Jeremy Stretch, CIBC Capital Markets' head of G10 FX
strategy.
Asia's investors have been riding high after a front-page editorial in
Monday's China Securities Journal extolling market fundamentals, which
was taken as official encouragement to buy stocks.
State-run media warned on Thursday that investors should still pursue
rational investments and manage risks, but that didn't rein in the
bulls.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.8% and
touched a 20-week high. The yuan rose to a four-month high as it broke
through the 7-per-dollar barrier.
"Broadly speaking, the Chinese economy is coping better not only with a
recovery but also in dealing with the potential of a second wave (of
infections)," said National Australia Bank FX strategist Rodrigo Catril.
"Rightly or wrongly, that market is liking the idea that the yuan can
strengthen on the back of equity inflows."
Although China's factory-gate prices fell for a fifth straight month in
June, signs of a pickup suggest a slow but steady recovery remains
intact.
Elsewhere, German export figures recovered less than expected in May as
demand remained subdued despite lockdowns being lifted in large parts of
Europe.
[to top of second column]
|

An SGX sign is pictured at Singapore Stock Exchange July 19, 2017.
REUTERS/Edgar Su

They jumped by 9% on the month after diving by 24% in April, but
economists had been hoping for a near 14% bounce and the numbers
remained almost 27% lower than their pre-crisis level in February,
the Federal Statistics office said.
Deutsche Bank's chief international strategist, Alan Ruskin, said
the yuan enjoyed the "perfect combination" of tight monetary policy,
yield advantage and equity demand.
In any case, its rally ignored growing pressure from the West over
China's tightening grip on Hong Kong, surging U.S. coronavirus cases
and a fresh lockdown of 5 million Australians in Melbourne.
Australia's benchmark ASX 200 index rose 1% and Japan's Nikkei rose
0.6%. The Australian dollar rose 0.2% to $0.6995, but - perhaps
indicating a cap on exuberance - it was unable to break past
resistance at $0.70.
U.S. Treasuries were not sold into the rally, either. Nor were the
safe havens of gold or the Japanese yen. The yield on benchmark U.S.
10-year Treasuries remained under pressure at 0.6545% and gold at
$1,810.73 an ounce.
EARNINGS AHEAD
The U.S. earnings season approaches with investor hopes high for a
stabilisation, but warning signals are flashing and Federal Reserve
officials raised fresh doubts on Wednesday about the durability of
the rebound.
The United States has also posted its largest number of daily new
coronavirus cases since the outbreak began and global tensions are
on the rise.
U.S. jobs data due at 1230 GMT will offer the next checkup on the
recovery's progress, followed by results next Tuesday from J.P.
Morgan, Citigroup and Wells Fargo, then Microsoft and Netflix on
Thursday.

"Earnings season is upon us, and we really want to see what it looks
like," said Jun Bei Liu, a portfolio manager at Australia's Tribeca
Investment Partners.
(Additional reporting by Tom Westbrook in Singapore and Olga Cotega
in London; editing by Larry King)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |