Stocks up, U.S. yields at 3% as markets ready for Fed hike
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[May 03, 2022] By
Danilo Masoni
MILAN (Reuters) - World stocks rose on
Tuesday and U.S. 10-year Treasury yields held above 3% as investors
prepared for the Federal Reserve's biggest rate hike since 2000.
In a busy week for central bank meetings, Australia's central bank
raised its key rate by a bigger-than-expected 25 basis points on
Tuesday, lifting the Aussie dollar as much as 1.3% and hitting local
shares.
On Thursday, the Bank of England is expected to raise rates for the
fourth time in a row.
MSCI's benchmark for global stocks gained 0.1% by 0813 GMT as European
shares rose after surviving a "flash crash" on Monday caused by a single
sell order trade by Citigroup.
The pan-European STOXX 600 equity benchmark was up 0.8%, bouncing back
from Monday's losses with a tech-led rally on Wall Street and supported
by upbeat earnings reports and gains in banking stocks tracking higher
bond yields.
"These are small flashes of sunshine in the markets. The broader
scenario however is not encouraging," said Enrico Vaccari, head of
institutional sales at Consultinvest in Milan.
"Even though there's room for stock markets to rally from oversold
levels, in the long term the headwinds are too many, simply because the
speed of the Fed's rate hikes will drive equity and especially bond
market movements," he added.
In the UK, the FTSE 100 index, which reopened following a long weekend,
fell 0.2%. In France, BNP rose 4% after a sharp increase in trading
activities helped the country's biggest lender top earnings growth
expectations.
In Asia, equities were mostly steady in holiday-thinned trade, with both
China and Japan markets shut, but in Hong Kong, Alibaba shares fell as
much as 9% on worries over the status of its billionaire founder Jack
Ma.
A state media report that Chinese authorities had taken action against a
person surnamed Ma hit the stock hard, but it recouped losses after the
report was revised to make clear it was not the company's founder.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng index was little changed and South Korea's KOSPI
declined 0.3%. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 index fell 0.4% as the central
bank raised rates and flagged more hikes ahead to contain inflation.
U.S. equity futures rose, with both the Nasdaq and S&P 500 e-minis up
around 0.4%.
On Monday, Wall Street closed a seesaw session higher as investors
bought into tech stocks in the last hour of trading amid bets they had
been overly beaten down ahead of this week's Fed meeting.
Investors expect the Fed to raise rates by 50 basis points at the end of
a two-day meeting on Wednesday, although there was uncertainty around
how hawkish Chair Jerome Powell will sound in comments following the
decision.
Around 250 basis points of rate hikes by the end of this year are
already priced in by money markets, which some analysts say reduces the
scope for hawkish surprises this week.
U.S. treasury yields stayed above 3% in European morning trade, after
breaching that key psychological milestone for the first time since
December 2018 on Monday.
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A general view shows the German share price index DAX board during
afternoon trading as markets react on the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) at the stock exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, March 25,
2020. REUTERS/Ralph Orlowski/Files
The U.S. benchmark 10-year yield added 2 basis points to 3.0025%.
Consultinvest's Vaccari said if 10-year U.S. yields were to reach 4%, there
would be a "very strong shift towards bonds even though that risk today looks
quite far away".
The dollar, which has been supported by safe haven buying on worries over the
economic outlook, stayed just below the nearly two-decade high reached in April
and the euro steadied above the lowest level in more five than years hit last
month.
The dollar index was last at 103.44, down 0.1% on the day. The euro traded up
0.1% at $1.0536.
RBA JOINS THE CLUB
Elsewhere in currency markets, the Australian dollar jumped after the central
bank raised its cash rate by a surprisingly large 25 basis points to 0.35%, the
first hike in more than a decade. It also flagged more rate hikes to come as it
pulls down the curtain on massive pandemic-related stimulus.
"The RBA has joined the club, with a rate hike today that was a little larger
than we had expected. The case to start to move policy off emergency settings
was clear and the RBA has responded to that," said Jo Masters, chief economist
at Barrenjoey in Sydney.
The Aussie was up 0.8% at $0.7107 as a majority of analysts in a Reuters poll
had expected a rise to only 0.25%.
The UK pound rose, moving away from its 22-month lows against the dollar as
traders took profits on the recent surge in the greenback ahead of the Bank of
England policy meeting.
Sterling rose 0.5% to $1.254, against the low of $1.2412 hit last week.
Oil prices slipped, pulled in opposite directions by China's COVID-19 lockdowns,
which could weigh on fuel demand, and prospects for a supply hit from a possible
European oil embargo on Russia.
Brent crude fell 0.5% to $107 per barrel, and U.S. crude also lost 0.5% to
$104.6.
London copper prices fell to three-month lows as COVID-19 restrictions in top
consumer China and the prospect of aggressive U.S. rate hikes fuelled worries
about weaker global growth hitting metals demand.
Benchmark three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange was down 1.7% at
$9,608.50 a tonne.
Gold prices hit their lowest since mid-February, as an elevated dollar and the
imminent rate hike by the Fed dampened bullion's appeal as an inflation hedge.
Spot gold was down 0.4% at $1,854.4 per ounce.
(Reporting by Danilo Masoni; Editing by Edmund Klamann)
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