Global shares muted as investors fret over China reopening
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[December 28, 2022] By
Naomi Rovnick and Ankur Banerjee
SINGAPORE, LONDON (Reuters) -Global equities traded sideways on
Wednesday after enthusiasm about China lifting COVID restrictions was
tempered by rising infections and investors' gloomy outlook for Western
economies.
MSCI's broadest index of global stocks was flat as investors stayed on
the sidelines at the end of a brutal year for equities. The global gauge
is on course to end 2022 19.5% down, in its worse performance since the
financial crisis of 2008, having buckled under the pressure of red-hot
inflation in Western economies, major central banks hiking interest
rates, and China's stringent zero-COVID policies.
Futures tracking Wall Street's S&P 500 share index and contracts on the
tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 both added 0.3%.
Europe's broad STOXX 600 also ticked 0.3% higher, but was still on
course for its worst year since 2018.
China's government announced on Monday it would stop requiring inbound
travellers to go into quarantine starting from Jan. 8.
While China's health system has come under heavy stress from the lifting
of restrictions so far, strategists at JP Morgan forecast a "likely
infection peak" during the Lunar New Year holiday next month, followed
by a "cyclical upturn after nearly three years of on and off
restrictions."
While a rebound in China may help the world economy avoid a hard
landing, investors are not sure it will be enough to offset the impact
of the U.S. Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank continuing to
raise borrowing costs.
“It's probable the recession itself will be shallow but the key word is
stagnation, so it's hard to see a high level of growth in the next
couple of years," said Francesco Sandrini, head of multi-asset
strategies at European fund manager Amundi.
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A man holding an umbrella is silhouetted
as he walks in front of an electric monitor displaying the Japanese
yen exchange rate against the U.S. dollar and Nikkei share average
in Tokyo, Japan July 14, 2022 REUTERS/Issei Kato
In fixed income, euro zone debt struggled to recover significantly
from a selloff triggered by hawkish rhetoric from the European
Central Bank at its December monetary policy meeting.
The two-year German government bond yield, which tracks interest
rate expectations, hovered just below a 14-year high reached in the
previous session, at 2.636%.
The 10-year German yield, a benchmark for euro zone borrowing costs,
inched 5 basis points lower to 2.463%, trading around levels last
seen regularly during the European debt crisis of 2011.
The yield on 10-year U.S. Treasury notes was down 2 basis points to
3.837%, hovering around the five-week high of 3.862% it touched in
the previous session.
The two-year U.S. Treasury yield was down 3 basis points at 4.429%.
In foreign exchange markets, the yen weakened 0.3% to 133.9.00 per
dollar, in a partial reversal of strong gains for the Japanese
currency after the nation's central bank made a hawkish tweak to its
controversial "yield curve control" policy that suppresses domestic
borrowing costs.
The index that measures the safe-haven dollar against six major
currencies was steady at 104.1, down about 9% since late September
when markets began looking ahead to a peak in inflation that might
prompt the Fed to stop hiking rates.
Brent crude, the global oil benchmark, dropped 0.9% to $83.55.
(Reporting by Ankur Banerjee, Naomi Rovnick; Editing by Bradley
Perrett and Tomasz Janowski)
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