Stocks climb as recovery hopes gather strength
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[September 02, 2020] By
Tom Wilson
LONDON (Reuters) - Shares gained strongly
on Wednesday as investors bet that improving economic data and more
policy stimulus from Washington would add momentum for equities.
European stocks gathered steam through morning trading, gaining 2.1% and
were set to snap four straight days of losses. London, Frankfurt and
Paris indexes were all up between 1.7%-2.4%.
Tech shares jumped 2.7% to their highest in more than 19 years, while
the chemical sector also starred, adding 3%.
The MSCI world equity index, which tracks shares in 49 countries, rose
0.2%. Wall Street futures gauges pointed to gains of 0.7%
Fuelling the optimism were bets that the world's major economies were
recovering from the damage caused by the coronavirus pandemic. Economic
data over recent days has fuelled such expectations, buoying stocks and
helping the dollar rise from two-year lows.
On Tuesday, data showed that U.S. manufacturing activity sped to a
nearly two-year high in August on a surge in new orders, its highest
level since November 2018.
"The data in the U.S. is telling us that the recovery is on track, and
this is good news," said Alessia Berardi, senior economist at Amundi,
adding there was a "disconnection" between economic fundamentals and
market positioning.
"It's too early to say that we will shift the recovery to a much
stronger acceleration, or a V-shaped recovery," she said.
The U.S. data followed similarly upbeat Chinese and European
manufacturing indicators this week.
Still, recovery from the euro zone's deepest recession on record will
take two years or more, according to a Reuters poll of economists last
month, although investors spoke of cautious optimism.
"We do need to focus on what the numbers are telling us," said Gregory
Perdon, co-chief investment officer at Arbuthnot Latham. "We are trying
to cautiously embrace risk, without trying to be foolish about it."
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A man using his mobile phone is silhouetted against a stock
quotation board outside a brokerage firm in Tokyo February 21, 2006.
REUTERS/Toru Hanai
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan had earlier risen
0.3%.
On Tuesday, both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq closed at record, with the technology
sector and Apple leading the charge. Tech giants have been among the winners in
the emerging recovery.
WAITING FOR WASHINGTON
Also feeding the positive mood were signs that Washington was moving closer to
offering some fiscal stimulus support to counter damage from the coronavirus.
White House chief of staff Mark Meadows said on Tuesday that Republicans in the
Senate were likely to take up a COVID-19 relief bill next week offering $500
billion in additional federal aid. The administration was still weighing help
for U.S. airlines, he added.
Yet congressional negotiations on further federal intervention remain at a
standstill after the Democratic-led U.S. House of Representatives passed its
$3.4 trillion measure in May.
With the dollar faltering in recent weeks over fears that the U.S. recovery may
lag that of China and the euro zone, the factory data was welcomed by currency
traders.
The dollar index added 0.4% at 92.612, rising on Tuesday its lowest since April
2018 at 91.737.
In commodities, oil rose towards $46 a barrel, gaining for a third day. Brent
crude, the global benchmark, was up 1 cents at $45.68 a barrel.
(For Reuters Live Markets blog on European and UK stock markets, please click
on: [LIVE/]; Reporting by Tom Wilson, editing by Larry King and Angus MacSwan)
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