World stock prices gain on strong U.S. holiday sales
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[December 28, 2021] By
Katanga Johnson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Global stock markets
rose on Monday and oil prices eased as investors hailed strong U.S.
holiday season sales and some grew less fearful about economic damage
from the Omicron variant of COVID-19.
Still, fears that the pandemic could hurt economic growth pushed gold
prices to the highest in more than a week despite pressure from a firmer
U.S. dollar.
A Mastercard Inc survey showed a substantial rise in U.S. holiday season
retail sales. This fueled investor optimism, boosting Wall Street and
lifting a gauge of stocks across the globe by 0.87%. European gains
offset earlier weakness across Asian markets.
Some investors grew confident a global recovery would regain steam next
year even though the pandemic has prompted U.S. airlines to cancel or
delay thousands of flights due to staff shortages, while several cruise
ships had to cancel stops after COVID-19 outbreaks aboard.
In Asia, China reported its highest daily rise in local COVID-19 cases
in 21 months as infections more than doubled in the northwestern city of
Xian, its latest hotspot.
In France, the government convened a special meeting that could trigger
new restrictions after the country hit another infection record.
Spot gold added 0.1% to $1,811.92 an ounce.
Wall Street's main stock indexes notched their fourth straight session
of gains, after reports last week that the highly infectious Omicron
variant may not be as deadly as earlier types of COVID-19.
"Heading into 2022 we will still have COVID uncertainties but the good
news is that, according to the WHO, we may be see the end of the
pandemic towards the end of year," said Jawaid Afsar, sales trader at
Securequity.
He added that next year markets must also contend with other issues,
ranging from inflationary pressures to policy tightening and
geopolitical risks.
Looking ahead, thin trading volumes ahead of New Year could make markets
volatile. Still, since 1945, the last five trading days of December and
the first two days of January have boded well for U.S. stocks 75% of the
time, according to CFRA Research data.
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A trader in a face mask works on the trading floor at the New York
Stock Exchange (NYSE) as the Omicron coronavirus variant continues
to spread in Manhattan, New York City, U.S., December 20, 2021.
REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
The pan-European STOXX 600 index rose 0.62%, nearing its highest level in over a
month.
Mainland Chinese shares weakened, with Shanghai's benchmark sliding 0.4% and an
index of blue chips retreating less than 0.1%. Property stocks did get a lift,
though, after China's central bank vowed to promote healthy development of the
real estate market.
Australia, Hong Kong and Britain were among markets closed on Monday for
holidays.
DOLLAR RANGEBOUND
On Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.98%, while the S&P 500
gained 1.38% after hitting a record high during the session. The Nasdaq
Composite added 1.39%.
In debt markets, U.S. Treasuries 10-year yields held below Thursday's high of
just above 1.5%.
In foreign exchange markets, the dollar was rangebound, despite a hawkish turn
at the Federal Reserve this month that saw policymakers signal three
quarter-point rate hikes in 2022.
The dollar index fell 0.026%, with the euro up 0.01% to $1.1326
In the crude market, U.S. crude recently rose 3.04% to $76.03 per barrel and
Brent was at $78.94, up 3.68% on the day.
(Reporting by Katanga Johnson in Washington; Additonal reporting bu Danilo
Masoni in Milan and Kevin Buckland in Tokyo; Editing by Pravin Char, Alexander
Smith and David Gregorio)
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