Shares rise, dollar wobbles after market sees Powell comments as dovish
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[February 08, 2023] By
Ankur Banerjee and Alun John
LONDON/SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Shares globally jumped and most currencies
rose against the dollar on Wednesday, as investors discerned a dovish
tone in comments from Fed Chair Jerome Powell, though a policy tweak by
the ECB meant European bonds sat out the rally.
MSCI's world share index rose 0.37%, heading back towards the nine-month
high it hit in early February, and Europe's STOXX 600 index gained 0.85%
to a fresh nine month peak.
Major benchmarks in France, Britain and Germany were all well into
positive territory, after shares gained on Wall Street overnight and in
Asia earlier in the day.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.76%
though Japan's Nikkei failed to join in the rally after disappointing
results from big tech names including Nintendo. [.T]
In an eagerly awaited speech on Tuesday, the Federal Reserve's Powell
reiterated that disinflation has begun but warned Friday's eye-popping
jobs report showed why the battle against inflation will "take quite a
bit of time."
The data showed a surprising addition of 517,000 new jobs in January and
stoked fears that the tight labour market may compel the Fed to remain
hawkish, and investors were relieved that that Powell did not lean
further into this argument in his speech.
"The market is looking for a dovish message where it can almost
regardless. Powell said effectively the terminal rate could be higher
than the market expects, but the Nasdaq and S&P500 were up, though I
think they're wrong," said Ben Jones, director of macro research at
Invesco.
Aggressive rate increases by the Fed and other central banks last year
to tame inflation had hurt shares and boosted the dollar, but those
trends have reversed this year on signs that inflation had begun to
slacken, raising hopes of rate cuts towards the end of this year.
"At the moment (markets are ) all about the Fed, but at some point it
has to morph into being about growth and earnings growth as well," said
Jones.
Powell's avoidance of a more hawkish tone also gave a cue to currency
markets, as the euro rose 0.23% against the dollar, and the pound gained
0.33%. [FRX/]
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Men walk past an electric board
displaying Nikkei and other countries' indexes outside a brokerage
in Tokyo, Japan January 16, 2023. The characters on the screen
reads,"government bonds". REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
"The dollar selling also reflected what Powell didn’t say," said
MUFG FX analysts in a morning note to clients.
U.S. Treasuries firmed a little on Wednesday with the benchmark 10
year yield <US 10YT=RR> down 3 basis points (bps) to 3.649% and the
two year yield down 4 bps. [US/]
Yields move inversely to prices.
However in Europe bonds continued to sell off following a sharp
tumble the previous day after the European Central Bank said it
would cut the interest rate it pays governments on deposits.
[GVD/EUR]
Two-year German yields, the most sensitive to any shifts in
expectations for interest rates and inflation, rose by as much as 11
basis points (bps) to 2.725% in early trading, their highest since
Jan. 3.
The other overnight news event was U.S. President Joe Biden's State
of the Union speech in which he challenged Republicans to lift the
U.S. debt ceiling and support tax policies that were friendlier to
middle class Americans.
Assailing oil companies for making high profits and corporate
America for taking advantage of consumers, Biden used his prime time
speech to outline progressive priorities of his Democratic Party
that are anathema to many Republican lawmakers.
Oil prices ticked up on Wednesday, continuing this week's gains with
Brent crude at $84.15, up 0.5% on the day, U.S. crude rose 0.5% to
$77.54 per barrel, helped by the slightly softer dollar. [O/R]
Gold likewise rose, with the spot price up 0.4% to $1882.9 per
ounce.
(Editing by Sam Holmes, Lincoln Feast and Simon Cameron-Moore)
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