World stocks steady, Treasuries edge up as Delta variant
spreads
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[July 09, 2021] By
Simon Jessop
LONDON (Reuters) - World stocks steadied,
Treasury yields bounced and the dollar held firm on Friday as markets
took a cautious breather in the face of new concerns about the pace of
the economic recovery from COVID-19.
Markets have been roiled this week as a rise in cases of the Delta
coronavirus variant crimped risk appetite and led to a flight to safety,
with some betting the post-pandemic reflation trade had stalled and
secular stagnation was back on the agenda.
"There seems to be the gradual realisation for many that the vaccination
programmes alone won’t prove enough to get economies back to their pre-COVID
normality, with cases at the global level now ticking up again as the
more infectious Delta variant spreads across the world," said Deutsche
Bank analyst Jim Reid.
Weighed against that is the still ultra-easy monetary policy from many
major central banks, although some fear this could yet be curtailed if
inflation picks up and policymaker largesse is reined in.
"Swings in sentiment and positioning may prove to be powerful in both
directions. But ultimately, the data will be key," said Mark Dowding,
chief investment officer at BlueBay Asset Management.
On Friday, data from China showed new bank loans rose more than expected
in June, while broad credit growth also picked up. China's central bank
also announced a new cut in the cash banks must hold in reserve, trying
to shore up growth.
The MSCI World index edged higher, up 0.1%, as gains among many European
bourses helped offset overnight weakness in Asia, but remains on course
for a weekly fall of around 1%.
The STOXX Europe 600 index was up 1%, recovering more than half of the
prior session's decline, but still on course to record the second
straight week of losses.
Overnight in Asia, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside
Japan had briefly touched two-month lows before paring losses to trade
down 0.1%. U.S. stock futures pointed to a higher open on Wall Street,
up 0.3%.
Analysts said an accumulation of events had triggered the more cautious
sentiment.
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Fears central banks could choke economic recovery by tightening policy to try to
curb inflation, the rapid spread of the Delta variant and low rates of
vaccination have darkened the outlook.
In Australia, stay-at-home orders were introduced in Sydney to combat the spread
of the virus. Vietnam also introduced new restrictions. Record deaths were
reported across South Asia.
Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco President Mary Daly told the Financial
Times that low vaccination rates in some parts of the world posed a threat to
U.S. growth.
After dipping sharply over the early part of the week, yields on 10-year
Treasury notes were on Friday up around 4.5 basis points to 1.336%, off the
4-1/2 month low of 1.25% hit on Thursday.
A reading on Thursday on the number of Americans filing new unemployment claims
added to views that the job market recovery from the pandemic continues to be
choppy.
In Europe, safe-haven German Bund yields ticked higher but were still eyeing the
biggest two-week drop since March 2020 as investors eyed a likely longer road to
economic recovery.
In currencies, the safe haven yen was up 0.3% at 110.10 per dollar, heading for
its biggest weekly rise since November. The euro dipped to $1.1837.
That left the dollar index, which tracks the greenback versus a basket of other
major currencies, hovering around flat, last down 0.1% at 92.284.
"The most important issue to consider is the current drop in yields globally,
and what this downward trend implies in terms of risk aversion and trade
repositioning," Thomas Flury, Head of FX Strategies at UBS Global Wealth
Management, wrote in a note.
"So far, we think markets are trapped in some momentum trades, which have little
persistence."
Gold, another safe-haven asset, was on track for its third straight weekly gain.
It was last up 0.1% at $1,804 an ounce.
Oil prices added to overnight gains as U.S inventories declined, but remain on
course for a weekly loss. Brent crude was up 67 cents to $74.79 a barrel. U.S.
crude added 79 cents to $73.73 per barrel.
(Additional reporting by Abhinav Ramnarayan, Swati Pandey and Sujata Rao;
Editing by Shri Navaratnam, Giles Elgood and Timothy Heritage)
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