World shares cling near record highs
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[July 05, 2021] By
Tom Arnold and Kevin Buckland
LONDON/TOKYO (Reuters) - World stocks clung
close to record highs on Monday as worries about the Delta variant of
COVID-19 offset positive sentiment from surging euro zone business
activity and a welcome U.S. jobs report.
The STOXX index of 600 leading European companies was flat, reversing
earlier losses after data showed euro zone businesses expanded activity
at the fastest rate in 15 years in June.
Activity for British services firms also soared in June, albeit at a
slightly slower rate.
French shares sank 0.4% as Health Minister Olivier Veran warned France
could be heading for a fourth wave of the pandemic due to the highly
transmissible Delta variant.
COVID-19 angst also weighed on Japan shares, with the Nikkei falling
0.6%, to a two-week low, following a surge in infections in Tokyo, just
weeks before the city hosts the Olympics.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan, was flat.
China's blue chip stock index recovered from earlier losses to close
0.1% higher as pledges by Beijing to continue policy support for its
tech sector helped counter worries about a crackdown on ride-hailing
giant Didi Global and scrutiny of other platform companies in the
country.
The MSCI All Country World index closed at a record 724.66 last week,
and was 0.1% higher on Monday.
Trading was thinner than usual with U.S. markets closed for the extended
4th of July weekend.
"Markets in general are still trying to find their feet," said James
Athey, investment director, Aberdeen Standard Investments.
"Equities, of course, continue to shrug off or ignore anything that
might be considered remotely negative as they continue their merry and
complacent dance towards an inevitable reckoning."
S&P 500 futures signalled a 0.1% dip for Tuesday's open, after the index
closed 0.8% higher at a record on Friday. The Dow Jones Industrial
Average rose 0.4% and the Nasdaq Composite added 0.8% to also hit a
record. [.N]
U.S. non-farm payrolls increased by a bigger-than-expected 850,000 jobs
last month, data on Friday showed. But the unemployment rate
unexpectedly ticked up to 5.9% from 5.8%, while the closely watched
average hourly earnings, a gauge of wage inflation, rose 0.3% last
month, lower than the consensus forecast for a 0.4% increase.
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A man watches an electric board showing Nikkei index outside a
brokerage at a business district in Tokyo, Japan, June 21, 2021.
REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
"The goldilocks print suggests there is no need to accelerate the tapering
timeline or the implied rate hike profile," Tapas Strickland, an analyst at
National Australia Bank, wrote in a client note.
"Overall the level of payrolls is still 6.8 million below pre-pandemic February
2020 levels and is still below the level of substantial progress needed by the
Fed. As such there is nothing in this report for the Fed to become hawkish
about."
Eyes will be trained on the minutes of the Federal Open Markets Committee
meeting from last month, when policymakers surprised markets by signalling two
rate hikes by the end of 2023.
Commentary by Fed officials since then has been more balanced, particularly from
Chair Jerome Powell, and investors parse Wednesday's release for further clues
on the timing of policy tightening.
Euro zone government bond yields nudged higher but analysts expect the recent
downward trajectory to resume after the U.S. payrolls data.
Germany's 10-year Bund yield was up by half a basis point at -0.231%.
The dollar was mostly flat on Monday after dropping from a three-month high at
the end of last week, pressured by the weaker details of the U.S. payrolls
report.
The greenback climbed by about 0.2% to $1.1859 per euro and traded flat at
111.05 yen.
Gold was up 0.3% to $1,792.30 an ounce.
Crude oil was rangebound as OPEC+ talks dragged on. Saudi Arabia's energy
minister pushed back on Sunday against opposition by fellow Gulf producer the
United Arab Emirates to a proposed OPEC+ deal and called for "compromise and
rationality" to secure agreement when the group reconvenes on Monday.
Brent crude added 0.1% $76.21 a barrel, and U.S. crude gained 0.1% to $75.25 a
barrel. [O/R]
(Editing by Sam Holmes and Angus MacSwan)
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