Shares march higher after Fed and BoE hikes; dollar regains traction
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[May 05, 2022] By
Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - Global equity markets
were still on the front foot on Thursday on relief that the biggest hike
in U.S. interest rates in more than two decades hadn't been even
sharper.
London, Paris and Frankfurt raced up between 1.3% and 2% in Europe [.EU]
amid collective cheers at Wednesday's 50 basis point Federal Reserve
rate hike and its accompanying signals that 75 bps moves were now
unlikely.
It kept European government bond yields largely in check as the Bank of
England hikes its rates for the fourth time since December, while Brent
prices steadied after the European Union's plan to ban Russian oil
imports have seen them spike 5%. [O/R]
"The fact (Fed Chair) Powell removed the 75 basis point hike from the
table, I think that is what the markets are reacting to, it is a bit of
a relief rally," BlackRock's EMEA Head of Investment Strategy for its
iShares unit, Karim Chedid, said.
"Inflation data is all important now and if it flattens off as the Fed
is expecting then the markets will be ok with that."
In currency markets, the dollar was gradually regaining its footing
after the Fed's move had caused its biggest drop in nearly two months.
It is up more than 7% so far this year, on track for its biggest annual
gains since 2015. [/FRX]
Sterling shuffled back to $1.2548 despite the 25 bps BoE hike which had
been fully expected while the euro also wilted back to $1.05 after dire
German industrial orders data.
"The German economy is programmed for a downturn," said Thomas Gitzel,
chief economist at VP Bank, pointing to a plunge in exports in March as
well.
"The war in Ukraine, the supply chain problems and high rates of
inflation are spoiling companies' appetite for investment. Incoming
orders are suffering from this," he said, adding that a recession was
becoming increasingly likely.
The main action was centred on the equity markets, though.
Wall Street bulls had seen the Dow Jones Industrial Average jump 2.8%,
the S&P 500 gain 3% and Nasdaq finish 3.1% higher. Futures prices
pointed to some profit taking later, but BlackRock's Chedid said there
might now finally be some positive signs showing. [.N]
Trading in U.S. Exchange Traded Funds - the main instruments now used to
passively follow major market moves - had surged to 37% of all dealing
during Wednesday's rally, 10% more than normal over the last month.
"It suggests we are getting some dip-buying behaviour, which is a good
sign for equities," he added, pointing out too that with bonds globally
now offering investors 4% return overall, money was now flowing into
that key segment too.
FED UP
For bears, there were still no signs of a truce in Ukraine ahead of next
week's key WWII Victory Day parades in Moscow.
Having failed to capture Kyiv in the early weeks of an invasion that has
killed thousands and flattened towns, Russia has accelerated attacks in
southern and eastern Ukraine, including on the Azovstal steel works in
Mariupol.
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Investors stand in front of an electronic board showing stock
information on the first trading day after the week-long Lunar New
Year holiday at a brokerage house in Shanghai, China, February 15,
2016. REUTERS/Aly Song
Overnight, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan had risen
a modest 0.5%, although trading had been thin with both Japanese and Korean
markets still closed for public holidays.
Marcella Chow, Hong Kong-based global market strategist at J.P. Morgan Asset
Management, said the region was likely to be relieved that the Federal Reserve's
rate rise was in line with expectations, as it impacts global sentiment and
costs.
The half a percentage point rate increase was the biggest jump in 22 years and
first back-to-back rise since 2006. Fed Chair Jerome Powell said policymakers
were ready to approve similar-sized rate hikes at upcoming policy meetings in
June and July.
Crucially for many investors, though, he also said it was not "actively
considering" a 75 basis-point rate hike, tempering fears something of that
magnitude could be on the cards with U.S. inflation now its hottest in decades.
China's battered shares had also recovered some ground, gaining 0.7% as mainland
markets resumed trade after a three-day holiday.
Investors also cheered a pledge by China's central bank for more monetary policy
support to help businesses badly hit by the latest COVID-19 outbreak.
J.P. Morgan's Chow added she expects that market to make further gains with
other high level Chinese officials also pledging support recently.
Among the key commodities, gold was up almost 1% at $1,900 per ounce having
dropped 8% since March.
U.S. crude futures gained 0.3% to $108.21 a barrel and Brent steadied at
$110.25.
Both benchmarks had risen over $5 a barrel on Wednesday after the European Union
laid out plans for new sanctions against Russia, including an embargo on crude
in six months. [O/R]
The proposal, which needs unanimous backing from all 27 EU countries, also
includes a phasing out of imports of Russian refined products by the end of 2022
and a ban on all shipping and insurance services for the transportation of
Russian oil.
"The oil market has not fully priced in the potential of an EU oil embargo, so
higher crude prices are to be expected in the summer months if it's voted into
law," said Rystad Energy’s head of oil markets research, Bjornar Tonhaugen.
(Reporting by Marc Jones; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
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