European stocks, U.S. futures stage tentative rebound
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[December 06, 2021] By
Julien Ponthus
LONDON (Reuters) -European stocks opened
higher on Monday while U.S. futures also traded in the black in a
tentative rebound from last week when the spread of the COVID-19 Omicron
variant and expectations of tighter U.S. monetary policy rocked global
markets.
Optimism in Europe overcame a rough session in Asia where the MSCI index
of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan lost almost 1%.
China's central bank said it would cut the amount of cash banks must
hold as reserves in an attempt to revive economic growth while the
region has seen a series of corporate setbacks after ride-hailing giant
Didi decided to withdraw from its New York listing last week.
Shares in China's Evergrande plunged 20% after the developer said there
was no guarantee it would have enough funds to meet debt repayments.
Another giant, Alibaba dropped more than 5% after announcing it would
reorganise its e-commerce businesses while U.S. regulatory opposition to
the sale of Softbank-owned chip firm Arm pushed the Japanese
conglomerate 8% lower.
The mood was more upbeat moving West with the pan-European STOXX 600 up
0.7% and S&P 500 futures adding 0.5%.
Ten-year U.S. yields were also rising back above 1.38% after losing
almost 13 basis points last week.
November's mixed U.S. jobs report did little to shake market
expectations of more aggressive tightening by the Federal Reserve.
As uncertainty runs high over the human and economic cost expected from
the Omicron variant, investors are focusing on rising U.S. inflation
which could prevent the Fed from coming to the rescue should market
mayhem re-emerge.
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An electronic stock quotation board is displayed inside a conference
hall in Tokyo, Japan November 1, 2021. REUTERS/Issei Kato
"By severely limiting the FOMC's ability to respond to downside risks posed by
Omicron, inflation has effectively destroyed the Fed put," Jefferies analysts
said in note.
Inflation is "now the dominant driver of not only rates, but all risk assets",
they added as traders wait for Friday's U.S. consumer price report.
The U.S. dollar index ticked up 0.05% in European morning trading after hitting
brief 13-month peaks against the Australian and New Zealand dollars which both
later rebounded.
The euro eased a touch to $1.1289, still well above its recent trough at
$1.1184.
Bitcoin was down 2.8% and was last at $48,060. It hit a low of $41,967 over the
weekend as profit-taking and macro-economic concerns prompted nearly $1 billion
worth of selling across cryptocurrencies.
Oil prices rose by more than $1 a barrel after top exporter Saudi Arabia raised
prices for its crude sold to Asia and the United States, and as indirect
U.S.-Iran talks on reviving a nuclear deal appeared to hit an impasse.[O/R]
Brent climbed $1.74 to $71.61 a barrel, while U.S. crude added $1.85 to $68.11
per barrel.
Gold prices edged 0.15% lower, pressured by the resilient dollar.
(Reporting by Julien Ponthus and Wayne Cole; Editing by Sam Holmes and Emelia
Sithole-Matarise)
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