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		World stocks gain as bond yields steady
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		 [March 03, 2021] 
		By Tom Wilson 
 LONDON (Reuters) - Shares from Asia to 
		Europe gained on Wednesday, as a retreat in U.S. Treasury yields fuelled 
		demand for riskier assets from oil to bitcoin and kept the dollar pinned 
		down.
 
 The Euro STOXX 600 added 0.5%, with Frankfurt shares climbing 1% to a 
		record high and London's FTSE gaining 1.1% before the UK's new budget is 
		introduced, with measures to boost the economy.
 
 Carmakers led the gains, adding more than 3% to reach their highest 
		since June 2018.
 
 MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was up 1.7%, 
		led by shares in China.
 
 Wall Street was set to make gains, too, with e-mini S&P futures up 0.6%.
 
 The gains for equities came as benchmark U.S. government bond yields 
		steadied further after last month's sell-off.
 
 The yield on 10-year Treasury notes stood at 1.41%, down from last 
		week's one-year high of 1.61%, before a slew of U.S. economic data set 
		for release later this week. Bond yields rise when their prices fall.
 
		
		 
		
 Euro zone government bond yields were little changed, with the benchmark 
		German 10-year Bund yield flat at -0.34%. It spiked last week to 
		-0.203%.
 
 Surging yields across the world, fuelled by moves in Treasuries, have 
		buffeted financial markets in recent weeks. Investors were betting a 
		strong U.S. economic rebound amid ultra-loose monetary conditions would 
		fuel inflation.
 
 Still, optimism that more imminent U.S. stimulus will energise the 
		global economic recovery buoyed stocks, with U.S. President Joe Biden 
		close to passing a $1.9 trillion spending package.
 
 "We are caught in the middle of this crossfire between a more positive 
		macro situation, and some excesses that have been developing here and 
		there," said Olivier Marciot, senior portfolio manager at Unigestion.
 
 "The market is reassessing the situation as whether or not it (stock 
		market gains) have been too high and too fast."
 
 Wall Street had ended lower on Tuesday, pulled down by Apple and Tesla 
		as fears on overly high valuations lingered.
 
 The MSCI world equity index, which tracks shares in 49 countries, gained 
		0.3%.
 
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			The London Stock Exchange Group offices are seen in the City of 
			London, Britain, December 29, 2017. REUTERS/Toby Melville/File Photo 
            
			 
            FROTHY PRICES?
 Some analysts warned stock prices may be frothy, a fear echoed by a 
			top Chinese regulatory official on Tuesday, and could make it hard 
			for equity markets to hang on to gains if governments and central 
			banks tighten the stimulus taps.
 
 Fears that last week's sell-off in U.S. Treasuries could resume may 
			also put a lid on stock prices, they said.
 
 "The big question is whether those valuations can be justified as 
			the economy and markets are weaned off the massive levels of 
			stimulus they’ve been receiving over the last year," Deutsche Bank 
			analysts wrote in a note.
 
 Improved sentiment weighed on the U.S. dollar and helped riskier 
			currencies.
 
 The dollar had gained in recent days from hopes the United States 
			would enjoy a faster economic recovery, and that the U.S. central 
			bank would tolerate higher bond yields.
 
 Yet an index of the dollar against six of its major peers was little 
			changed at 90.787, after dropping back from a nearly one-month high 
			overnight.
 
 Ahead of the UK finance minister Rishi Sunak's budget speech 
			beginning at 1230 GMT, the pound was flat at $1.3956.
 
 The Australian dollar, which has benefited from bets on an 
			acceleration in global trade, held flat around $0.7811 as 
			stronger-than-expected economic growth fuelled hopes for a recovery 
			from the coronavirus pandemic.
 
 Bitcoin jumped more than 6% to climb above $50,000 and to its 
			highest in a week.
 
            
			 
			Gold, on the other hand, slipped 0.8%.
 Oil prices rose, boosted by expectations that OPEC+ producers might 
			decide against increasing output when they meet this week.
 
 U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude rose 1.9% to $60.89 a barrel. 
			Brent futures rose 1.3% to $63.88. [O/R]
 
 (Reporting by Tom Wilson in London; additional reporting by Stanley 
			White in Tokyo; editing by Christopher Cushing, Christian 
			Schmollinger, Larry King)
 
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