Rally pauses ahead of ECB stimulus plan
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[June 04, 2020]
By Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - The rapid rally in world
markets finally paused for breath on Thursday, as traders waited to hear
how much more stimulus the European Central Bank plans to shovel out to
address the coronavirus slump.
The ECB is expected to pump in another 250-500 billion euros for the
cause, but after weeks of sharp gains for stocks, oil and
confidence-sensitive currencies, investors were taking the chance to
lock in some profit.
Asian stocks stalled at a two-month high, London, Frankfurt, Paris and
Brent dipped and the euro, pound and Aussie dollar all wilted as the
U.S. dollar snapped out of week-long run of falls.
"As always, it's become an asymmetric risk with the ECB," said Gilles
Moëc, chief economist of AXA Group, who was waiting to see how much new
bond buying stimulus the bank signals and the length of time that it
plans to do it.
"If they move (to provide immediate stimulus) it is partly priced in. If
they don't move it is going to be really bad," for markets, he added.
The ECB delivers its policy decision at 1145 GMT and its President,
Christine Lagarde, holds a news conference at 1230 GMT.
Moëc expects the bank to raise "the quantum" of bond purchases by 400
billion euros, from 750 billion to 1.1 trillion, though polls show
forecasts range from 250 billion to 500 billion.
Safe-haven German 10-year bond yields were hovering at their highest
since mid-April at -0.35%, while their Italian equivalents were at 1.57%
compared to the 3% hit at the height of the country's coronavirus woes
in March.
The yield on the benchmark U.S. Treasury 10-year eased slightly after a
6 bps rise on Wednesday to 0.77%. It was the largest one day rise in
rates since May 18, and the highest closing level since April 14.
The dollar rose around 0.3% against a basket of currencies, having
weakened as markets have grown more optimistic about the post-COVID 19
recovery and following widespread protests in the U.S. over the death of
a black man in police custody.
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An investor sits next to a stock quotation board at a brokerage
office in Beijing, China January 3, 2020. REUTERS/Jason Lee
The U.S. currency began strengthening in overnight trading but
picked up more sharply from around 0600 GMT. It pushed the euro back
below $1.12 and the Japanese yen to a two-month low of 109.150.
Riskier currencies fell too. The Australian dollar dropped as much
as 0.5% to $0.6884 after retail sales there suffered a historic
plunge. Shares had gained though after the country's prime minister
unveiled its fourth stimulus package.
Hong Kong's stock market was still hobbled by concerns about
Beijing's new national security law for the former British colony
and protests in the city's legislature over a separate bill related
to China's national anthem.
Chinese airline shares also drooped after U.S. President Donald
Trump's administration said on Wednesday it will bar Chinese
passenger carriers from flying to the United States from June 16 in
latest spat between the two countries.
Oil prices, which have been on a tear in recent weeks, also dipped
as doubts about supply cuts by major producers began to creep back
in.
U.S. crude fell 2% to $36.53 a barrel. Brent crude fell 1.4% to
$39.23 per barrel, having touched highs above $40 a barrel for the
first time since early March.
Spot gold rose 0.25% to $1,701.28 an ounce early on Thursday after
losing 1.6% on Wednesday.
(Reporting by Stanley White in Tokyo and David Henry in New York;
Editing by Toby Chopra)
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