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		Dovish Fed lifts Wall Street stock futures to record high
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		 [April 08, 2021]  By 
		Huw Jones 
 LONDON (Reuters) - Wall Street was poised 
		to notch a record high on Thursday after reassurance from the Federal 
		Reserve that its bond-buying support for economic recovery won't be 
		ending anytime soon.
 
 E-mini futures on the S&P 500 were up 0.33% at 4,083 points, just off a 
		record high of 4,092.75 earlier. Nasdaq futures gained 0.86%
 
 Minutes of the Fed's last policy meeting, published on Wednesday, showed 
		members felt the economy was still short of target and were in no rush 
		to scale back their $120 billion a month of bond buying.
 
 "As long as that message remains consistent and, more importantly, 
		unified, that is going to have a bigger and bigger influence on yields," 
		said Derek Halpenny, head of research for global markets at MUFG.
 
		
		 
		
 "That is what is key in the market at the moment, as rates appear to 
		have reached some degree of equilibrium, and that is what is encouraging 
		the equities market performance. I can't really see anything on the 
		immediate horizon to upset that."
 
 U.S. Treasuries yields were down from their 14-month highs, although 
		analysts said markets will be tested next week when the U.S. earnings 
		seasons gets underway.
 
 The U.S. weekly jobless claims data is due at 1230 GMT, and is expected 
		to show the number of Americans filing for new unemployment benefits 
		dropped in the latest week, a further sign the economy is recovering 
		from COVID-19.
 
 Fed Chairman Jerome Powell speaks at 1600 GMT at an International 
		Monetary Fund event and he is likely to reiterate the dovish outlook.
 
 There was little in the way of corporate news, though shares in Tesla 
		Inc rose about 1% after President Joe Biden's administration proposed a 
		$174 billion boost to electric vehicles.
 
 ECB DOVISH TOO
 
 Stocks in Europe also reached record highs, buoyed by optimism in 
		Britain over easing lockdown restrictions and supportive outlooks from 
		the Fed and the European Central Bank.
 
 The European STOXX index of 600 leading companies rose 0.44%, just off 
		the high of 436.66 points it reached earlier in the session. London's 
		blue-chip FTSE 100 index was up 0.4%.
 
		
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			A man walks past the New York Stock Exchange on the corner of Wall 
			and Broad streets in New York City, New York, U.S., March 13, 2020. 
			REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File Photo 
            
			 
"It's looking good as evaluations in Europe are much lower than they are in the 
U.S., so there is potentially more upside. The line of least resistance for 
European markets is higher," said Michael Hewson, chief market analyst at CMC 
Markets.
 "In terms of economic re-opening, there is enough optimism built in at the 
moment to drive markets quite a bit higher from here, and the Fed has reiterated 
it's going to remain on hold for a while," Hewson said.
 
 The ECB said in the account of its March 11 meeting, published on Thursday, that 
it was important to provide reassurance there would be no change in its 
accommodative monetary policy for as long as necessary.
 
In Asia, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan inched up 
0.3% in quiet trade. Japan's Nikkei slipped 0.3%, not helped by news Tokyo's 
governor had asked for emergency measures to stem a surge of COVID-19 
infections.
 In currencies, the dollar index eased to 92.291 from its recent five-month high 
at 93.439.
 
 The euro was steady at $1.1877, after rising as high as $1.1914 overnight 
following a surprisingly upbeat survey of European Union business activity.
 
 In commodity markets, gold was at $1,750 an ounce.
 
 Oil prices fell after official figures showed a bigincrease in U.S. gasoline 
stockpiles, causing concern about demand for crude weakening in the world's 
biggest consumer of the resource at a time when supplies around the world are 
rising.
 
  
 
 Brent fell 29 cents to $62.87 a barrel. U.S. crude lost 44 cents to $59.33 per 
barrel.
 
 (Aditional reporting by Wayne Cole and Chibuike Oguh; editing by Larry King)
 
 
				 
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