Stocks bounce, bond prices fall ahead of key ECB meeting
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[July 21, 2021] By
Lawrence White
LONDON (Reuters) - European stocks lifted
and bond prices fell across the euro area on Wednesday as investors bet
an earlier flight to safety sparked by fears about the spread of the
Delta coronavirus variant was overdone.
With a key European Central Bank meeting on Thursday expected to convey
a dovish tone and provide a further boost, the benchmark STOXX index of
the region's 600 largest shares rose 0.5%.
U.S. Treasury yields rose 5 basis points (bps) in London trade and
Germany's 10-year Bund yield reversed early falls, trading 2 bps higher
on the day at -0.40%, as a sense of calm crept back into European
markets.
The rally in risk assets followed an earlier rush to safe havens such as
the dollar and U.S. Treasuries, as a renewed surge in infections
globally displaced inflation as investors’ primary concern.
"The moves had gone too far," said Jan von Gerich, chief analyst at
Nordea.
"Markets have a tendency of doing that, but it's dangerous to say it's
over for now until we see more of a stabilisation".
A slew of upbeat updates from European blue-chip firms strengthened the
positive mood in stock markets, with travel and leisure stocks rallying
4% after getting hammered recently by worries about a resurgence in
coronavirus cases.
U.S. stocks looked unlikely to spoil the mood, with S&P 500 futures up
0.42%.
Last week, data showing a surge in U.S. consumer prices in June sparked
fears that the Federal Reserve could bring a quicker end to emergency
stimulus measures.
The shift from a debate over whether price spikes are transitory to
outright fear of the impact of the latest COVID-19 surge had pushed the
U.S. 10-year yield down more than 20 basis points in the space of a week
as investors have moved into safe-haven assets.
Gold likewise lost some of its recent safe haven lustre on Wednesday,
with spot prices falling 0.28% by 1009 GMT as investors preferred the
dollar.
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A staff member of the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE) is seen at the
empty trading space in Tokyo, Japan October 1, 2020. REUTERS/Issei
Kato
RISING INFECTIONS
The more positive mood in European shares on Wednesday contrasted with a 0.02%
fall in MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan, as South
Korea reported a daily record of new infections.
Seoul's KOSPI slid 0.52% and Hong Kong's Hang Seng index fell 0.4%.
Echoing concern in equities markets over a surge in global COVID-19 infections,
the dollar stayed near three-month highs on Wednesday.
"While some of the world is shrugging off rising infections as vaccination rates
limit the severity of any symptoms of new cases, there are few parts of the
world that can totally ignore this," said Rob Carnell, Asia-Pacific chief
economist at ING.
The dollar index was last up 0.06% at 93.023, with the euro down 0.04% to
$1.1754.
Oil prices extended gains from the previous session as improved risk appetite
provided support despite data showing an unexpected rise in U.S. oil inventories
last week and a weaker demand outlook due to rising COVID-19 infections.
Brent crude futures gained 84 cents, or 1.2%, to $70.19 a barrel at 1021 GMT,
having hit a session low of $68.63.
(Reporting by Andrew Galbraith and Lawrence White; Editing by Christopher
Cushing, Kim Coghill, Catherine Evans and Timothy Heritage; For Reuters Live
Markets blog on European and UK stock markets, please click on: [LIVE/])
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