Global shares rise, but face patchiest yearly performance since 2008
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[December 21, 2022] By
Amanda Cooper
LONDON (Reuters) -Global shares rose on Wednesday, regaining some
stability after the Bank of Japan rocked markets with a surprise
decision to loosen its tight leash on government bond yields, pushing
the yen to its biggest one-day gain against the dollar in 24 years.
The MSCI All-World index rose 0.1% on the day, although it is on track
for a 4.4% decline in December. This year, the index is set to have
fallen for eight out of 12 months, on a par only with 2008 for the
number of monthly losses in a calendar year on record.
In Europe, shares pared some of the previous day's declines, thanks in
large part to a rally in sportswear stocks, after Nike, the world's
largest sportswear company, beat quarterly revenue estimates. U.S. index
futures rose between 0.3%-0.5%, suggesting some of this strength may
carry through to the Wall Street open later.
On Tuesday, the Bank of Japan (BOJ) widened its trading band for 10-year
government bond yields from 25 basis points (bps) either side of zero to
50 bps.
That triggered a leap in the yen, which had spent most of the year
sliding because of Japan's low yields, as well as selling in Japan's
stock market and a selloff for bonds around the world.
The decision by the BOJ, the last dovish bastion in the central bank
world, has added to concern among investors about how the impact of
rising interest rates and persistent inflation will affect the global
economy.
Fund managers are adopting an extremely cautious approach to the start
of 2023 and, as such, trading conditions are thin and highly volatile.
“We think recessions are coming in the US and Europe but its very hard
to gauge the amplitude of these recessions right now. This makes it very
hard to evaluate earnings potential for 2023 and so it is also very hard
to do the usual reasoning about valuations,” Bastien Drut, chief
thematic macro strategist at CPR, a unit of Amundi, Europe's largest
asset manager.
“We’ve taken profits from the rally in November and our positioning in
equities is rather low," he said.
The STOXX 600 rose almost 1%, led by the retail sector, where German
rivals Adidas and Puma rose 8.4% and 6.9%, respectively, while UK sports
apparel merchant JD Sports gained 5.3%, which helped the FTSE 100 gain
0.9%.
The dollar meanwhile clawed higher against a basket of major currencies,
which in turn nudged the gold price off six-month highs, while crude oil
bounced by 2% following data that showed a pickup in weekly demand.
[to top of second column] |
A man wearing a protective mask, amid
the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, walks past an
electronic board displaying Japan's Nikkei index and various
countries' stock market index prices outside a brokerage in Tokyo,
Japan, February 22, 2022. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
The U.S. currency saw its largest one-day fall against the yen in 24
years on Tuesday, dropping almost 4% after the BOJ said it would let
long-term interest rates fluctuate more widely. By Wednesday, it was
flat against the yen at 131.665, close to its lowest since early
August.
Some of the major drivers of dollar gains - an ever weaker yen, a
struggling Chinese yuan and outsized rises in U.S. yields - are
starting to shift. The euro held steady at $1.0627, not far from
last week's six-month high. [FRX/]
CARRY TRADES
Bond markets were kept under pressure as the last big central bank
anchoring its bond market starts to loosen its iron grip on yields.
Not just that, the worry that Japan's yield-seeking big investors in
overseas markets will have to shed some of those "carry" trades to
make up for a rising yen and bond losses at home drove markets, with
Aussie bonds selling off heavily and Asian currencies such as the
Singapore dollar on the backfoot.
"There appears to be growing caution about inadvertent "risk off"
from unwinding "carry" and knock-on impact in risk assets," analysts
at Mizuho wrote.
Citi analysts said the calm in equity markets might not last, and
things could get volatile in thinned year-end trading.
"Our equity traders caution that the most under-priced market risks
are roughly how high the structural inflation floor will settle in a
post-COVID world.
"We know the Fed is resolutely committed to seeing inflation taper
down to 2% and stay there, which suggests it may need to create a
lot more pain than markets currently discount in order to reach its
target," they said in a note.
Benchmark 10-year Treasury yields were unchanged on the day at
3.681%, having touched an overnight high of 3.772%. Japanese 10-year
yields closed up 7 bps at 0.48%, close to the BOJ's 0.5% ceiling.
[JP/]
Brent crude futures rose 2% to $81.59 a barrel, after data showed
privately held inventories of oil fell unexpectedly in the latest
week.
(Additional reporting by Naomi Rovnick in London and Tom Westbrook
and Vidya Ranganathan in Singapore;Editing by Christian Schmollinger
and Alexander Smith)
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