Omicron, dollar gains stymie world stocks' winning streak
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[December 30, 2021] By
Sujata Rao
LONDON (Reuters) - World stocks snapped a
seven-day rising streak on Thursday as the spread of Omicron worldwide
clouded bumper year-to-date gains, dented oil prices and boosted the
dollar.
Sentiment was supported, however, by signs that governments, despite
coronavirus cases hitting record highs, are trying to limit the economic
damage by relaxing rules on isolation rather than resorting to
lockdowns.
MSCI's global equity index has managed a 17% gain for the year, led by
rises of 28% and 22% in the S&P 500 and Europe's STOXX 600 respectively.
On Thursday, the index slipped modestly, though European markets inched
higher and futures implied a modestly firmer open on Wall Street.
Despite concerns, the view seems to be that the highly transmissible
Omicron COVID variant will be less lethal than feared, Holger Schmieding,
chief economist at Berenberg said.
"Markets are back trading the rebound story, the recovery story for
2022," Schmieding said, noting higher bond yields reflected expectations
of economic recovery and subsequently, a reduced pace of central bank
support.
There was relief too in Asia where South Korea's 5.1% industrial output
surge may indicate some easing of supply chain problems. Chinese shares
got a nearly 1% lift from Beijing signalling lower interest rates in
2022, though they are set to end 2021 down 5.5%.
Japanese shares in their last trading day of the year, slipped 0.4% -- a
4.9% annual gain but short of a three-decade top reached in September.
Shares in semiconductor superpower Taiwan ended with a 24% annual jump.
However, persistent inflation and a resulting hawkish turn by the U.S.
Federal Reserve is a source of concern for markets, with investors
starting to price in a first rate hike as early as March.
Two-year U.S. Treasury yields have shot up 55 basis points since
September to stand at 0.75%, near the highest since March last year.
However, reflecting expectations of a relatively short and shallow
rate-rise cycle, 10-year yields have reacted far less, rising around 20
bps in this period. They are up 4 bps for the week but eased 1.6 bps on
Thursday.
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A man shelters under an umbrella as he walks past the London Stock
Exchange in London, Britain, August 24, 2015. REUTERS/Suzanne
Plunkett/File Photo
The rise in U.S. borrowing costs has lifted German 10-year yields to -0.19%,
nearly a one-month high and up 15 bps since September.
The Fed outlook has combined with recent Omicron jitters to underpin the U.S.
dollar, which is set for a second month of gains. The greenback rose 0.4%
against a basket of currencies to 96.2, bouncing off a three-week low touched on
Wednesday when it was hit by the risk appetite revival.
The yen meanwhile has run into broad year-end selling over the past week, with
the dollar reaching its highest since mid-November at 115.06 yen.
"The front end of the U.S. rates market is pricing more rate hikes back into the
curve now so FX may be a battle, once again, between optimism about the global
recovery and expectations about the Fed," said Kit Juckes, a strategist at
Societe Generale.
However, oil prices slipped, hurt by demand growth concerns and news that China
had cut its first batch of 2022 crude oil import quotas by 11% in a sign it
would act against small inefficient refineries. [O/R]
Brent crude futures fell 0.6% to $78.74 a barrel, slipping for the first time in
four days.
However, Brent has climbed more than 50% this year, adding to the global
inflation pulse. The impact showed up in Spanish data showing that the annual
inflation rate for December was the highest year-end reading since 1989.
(Reporting by Sujata Rao, additional reporting by Julien Ponthus, Stefano
Rebaudo and Wayne Cole, Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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