Stocks and oil rally on reports of China COVID respite
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[November 04, 2022]
By Ankur Banerjee and Amanda Cooper
LONDON/SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Global stocks
rose on Friday for the first time in three days ahead of key U.S. jobs
data, as investors took heart from reports China may relax its COVID
rules, boosting major currencies against the dollar and prompting a 2%
rally in oil.
The MSCI index of global shares rose 0.3% on the day, breaking two
straight days of losses, but still headed for a near-3% weekly loss,
after more big rate hikes from the Federal Reserve and the Bank of
England.
China is working on a plan to end a system that banned individual
flights for bringing in passengers infected with the COVID-19 virus,
Bloomberg News reported on Friday, citing people familiar with the
matter.
On Friday, China reported its highest daily count of new local COVID-19
cases in six months and a foreign ministry spokesman said he was not
aware of the report, but equities still surged, pushing Shanghai's CSI
300 up by over 3%. The Hang Seng rose 5.4%, bringing gains for the week
to 8.75%, its strongest weekly performance in a decade.
"That rumour that we heard earlier in the week about possible
experiments with moving away from zero COVID, I'm guessing is still
driving things forward, which is a pretty flimsy pretext for the stocks
to be rallying," ING regional head of research Robert Carnell said.
"We don't think we're going to see any meaningful change in policy until
at least after the two sessions meeting in March. So that's a long way
away between now and then," he added.
China-sensitive stocks, such as mining companies and luxury goods
makers, rallied in Europe, lifting the STOXX 600 by nearly 1% to a
seven-week high. U.S. index futures rose between 0.6-0.8%, suggesting an
upbeat start on Wall Street, where the S&P 500 is heading for its
largest weekly decline since late September.
With risk appetite running higher than usual, the dollar fell against a
basket of major currencies, dropping 0.4%, which in turn boosted the
likes of the euro, oil and gold prices.
But those gains were muted given the month's most-watched data point -
U.S. employment - was due later.
Economists expect 200,000 workers to have been added to U.S. non-farm
payrolls in October. This would mark the slowest pace of growth so far
in 2022, but most metrics suggest the labour market remains robust.
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Silhouettes of passerby are seen as they
stand in front of an electric monitor displaying Japan's Nikkei
share average and world stock indexes outside a brokerage in Tokyo,
Japan, October 21, 2022 REUTERS/Issei Kato
This has been one of the factors that has enabled the Fed to
relentlessly raise interest rates to tame inflation. Wage inflation
is expected to have posted another increase last month, albeit at a
slower pace.
"This is obviously a double-edge sword, in so far as it offers some
comfort to the FOMC in its inflation battle, but on the other hand
puts a bigger squeeze on household incomes," ADM Investor Services
chief global economist Marc Ostwald said.
Markets were rattled earlier in the week by Fed Chair Jerome Powell,
who said it was "very premature" to think about slowing the pace of
monetary tightening and that interest rates would likely peak higher
and later than investors currently expect.
"Chair Powell removes the punchbowl yet again, in response to a tiny
bit of partying," Citi analysts said, referring to the past few
days' rise in equities over hopes of a change in tone from the
central bank.
In currencies, sterling rose 0.75% against the dollar to $1.12430,
paring some of Thursday's 2%-drop after the Bank of England said the
economy as facing a two-year recession even as it raised rates by
the most since 1989.
In commodities, oil bounced, fuelled by hopes for a relaxation of
zero-COVID rules in China, which is home to some of the world's
biggest energy consumers. [O/R]
Brent crude rose 2% to $96.96 a barrel, while U.S. crude gained 2.8%
to trade at $90.63 a barrel.
With the dollar on the backfoot, gold enjoyed a 1.4% rise in price
to around $1,652 an ounce. [GOL/]
(Additional reporting by Summer Zhen in Hong Kong; Editing by Kim
Coghill and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)
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