Global shares rally, retail surge drives silver to 8-year high
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[February 01, 2021]
By Simon Jessop
LONDON (Reuters) - Global shares bounced
and silver markets surged on Monday as retail investors expanded their
social media-fuelled battle with Wall Street to drive the precious metal
to an eight-year high.
Stock markets were roiled last week after a spike in retail demand to
buy the stocks most bet against by hedge funds drove huge gains in
companies such as GameStop Corp, and prompted fresh concern that
COVID-19 monetary and fiscal support measures were fuelling a market
bubble.
With chatrooms abuzz with talk that silver was the new target,
silver-exposed stocks, funds and coins jumped, helping push spot silver
up more than 11%, before gains were trimmed and it last traded up around
9%.
The bullish spirit helped London-listed miners post strong gains,
including one of more than 19% for Fresnillo
After falling 3.6% last week - its biggest weekly fall in three months -
the MSCI All-Country World Index rose 0.5% by midday, tracking overnight
gains in Asia.
Wall Street looked set for an even stronger bounce-back, with futures
for the S&P 500 and NASDAQ both up around 1.2%. The VIX 'fear gauge' was
down 7%.
While the retail battle versus Wall Street, coordinated over online
forums such as Reddit, created some systemic risks, the bigger danger
was in the tech sector, where some stocks had "eye watering valuations",
Deutsche Bank analyst Jim Reid said.
"Retail has in many parts driven such valuations in the last 10 months.
If this pops the wider market will have bigger issues than last week."
However, with corporate earnings still beating expectations - around 82%
of S&P 500 delivering a positive surprise - Kristina Hooper, Chief
Global Market Strategist at Invesco, said investors should look through
the recent volatility.
"We have to keep in mind that in general, stock market fundamentals are
solid."
Gold followed silver higher, up 0.8% to $1,859 an ounce, while oil also
tracked the gains in other commodities, with both Brent crude and its
U.S. peer up around 1%. [O/R]
While the stock market tussle continued to grab the headlines, analysts
cautioned that the bigger concern was economic momentum as coronavirus
lockdowns bite.
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The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock
exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, January 28, 2021. REUTERS/Staff
Data overnight showed Chinese factory activity slowed in January as
restrictions took a toll in some regions. In the euro zone,
manufacturing growth remained resilient at the start of the year but
the pace waned from December.
British data showed an even greater struggle, with manufacturers
facing the twin headwinds of COVID-19 and Britain's exit from the
European Union.
While the coronavirus vaccine rollout globally remains slow, with
concern about whether they will work on new COVID strains, Europe
was also bolstered by news that it would receive a further 9 million
doses from AstraZeneca in the first quarter.
The safe-haven dollar edged higher during the morning session in
Europe, with the dollar index last at 90.876 , having bounced from a
trough of 89.206 hit early in January.
The euro, meanwhile, extended earlier losses against the dollar,
down 0.5% to $1.2075, well off its recent peak at $1.2349, while the
pound gave up some of its early gains to trade up 0.1% on the day at
$1.3705..
With riskier markets bouncing, Italian government bond yields fell
2-3 basis points across the curve.
German Bund yields, meanwhile, the benchmark for the euro zone,
remained anchored around -0.51% on Monday, tracking U.S. Treasury
yields that also remained unchanged..
(Additional reporting by Sujata Rao, Abhinav Ramnarayan and Ritvik
Carvalho; Editing by William Maclean and Mark Heinrich)
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