Stocks tick higher despite tapering talk; cryptos bounce
after beating
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[May 20, 2021] By
Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - Europe’s stock markets
saw a tentative rebound on Thursday and bitcoin bounced more than 10%
after one of its spectacular smashes, though tapering talk from the U.S.
Federal Reserve kept bond markets under pressure.
After Wednesday's drama had seen the main cryptocurrencies shed almost a
third of their value at one point and the STOXX 600 suffer one of its
worst sell-offs of the year, traders were now watching a recovery
unfold. [.EU]
Bitcoin was up 9.5% at $40,265 having nearly slid though $30,000 on
Wednesday and been almost at $65,000 just over a month ago. The next
biggest cryptocurrency Ethereum which had fared even worse on Wednesday
was last up 11.3%.
Europe's equities meanwhile clawed back 0.6% helped by earnings from
telecoms firms Deutsche Telecom and France's Bouygues and talk that
Italian microchip heavyweight STMicroelectronics was eyeing up a
Norwegian rival. [.EU]
Commodities also steadied after a 5% overnight tumble in iron ore and
coking coal caused by China's cabinet announcing that it would take
steps to curb "unreasonable" prices and behaviours that bid up costs.
Referring to drops in the most pumped-up asset classes, investment firm
GMO's head of asset allocation, Ben Inker, said: "Right now we are
seeing the speculative bubble in the growth stocks seem to be
deflating... but is this the first innings of a broad deflation of
equity markets?"
Markets were now walking a tightrope between strong growth and
inflation, he added.
Minutes from the last U.S. Federal Reserve meeting published on
Wednesday showed "a number" of officials thought that if the recovery
holds up, it might be appropriate to "begin discussing a plan for
adjusting the pace of asset purchases".
"This is very much the market view, really," ING economist Rob Carnell
said on the phone from Singapore, with traders expecting strong hints
over summer that the "taper", as winding down support is known, is
coming later in the year.
The yield on 10-year U.S. Treasuries had risen 4.1 basis points
overnight to as high as 1.6830%. Europe's equivalent benchmark the
10-year German Bund was up almost 2 basis points in morning trade at a
still negative -0.093%.
The dollar settled after scraping itself off a four-month low to hover
around $1.2181 per euro. [US/][FRX/]
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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
The greenback had also pushed through its 20-day moving average against the yen
and Aussie and New Zealand dollars before taking its breather. It last bought
108.95 yen and the dollar index was last at 90.009.
On Wall Street overnight the S&P 500 closed 0.3% lower and the Nasdaq was flat,
something of a recovery after each dropped more than 1.6% during the session.
Futures markets were pointed to further modest falls later though. [.N]
(Graphic: Crypto-mayhem:
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/mkt/xlbvgadwavq/Pasted%20image%201621500259221.png)
CRYPTO KNIGHTS
The trigger for Wednesday's sharp falls in bitcoin, ether and other
cryptocurrencies appeared to be China's move on Tuesday to reinforce strict
curbs on crypto trading by barring financial institutions from providing
transaction services.
Traders said the huge run-up in prices for the asset class in recent months
meant that gravity also probably played a role, as well as Tesla boss Elon
Musk's apparent cooling on bitcoin over the amount of energy consumed in
processing transactions.
Musk had tweeted the 'diamond hands' emojis on Wednesday that traders on social
media use a sign they won't sell.
Outages at several major trading platforms during the maelstrom, which also set
ether tumbling nearly 50%, also did little to inspire confidence.
"It's not just crypto – although that is the poster child of this movement – but
SPACs, recent IPOs, ARK Innovation and Tesla, to name a few, have all lost their
bid," said Chris Weston, head of research at brokerage Pepperstone in Melbourne.
SPACs - special purpose vehicles set up and listed to buy up other firms -
enjoyed huge growth last year, as did the ARK innovation fund which focuses on
tech companies.
"For me, the overriding factor is liquidity and the timing of lower liquidity
and that is having huge ramifications - we are debating, not just a slower pace
of central bank asset purchases (QE), but when QE comes to an end."
(Additional reporting by Tom Westbrook in Singapore; Editing by Peter Graff)
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