Risk rally stalls as bullish investors take breather
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[November 16, 2023] By
Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - World stocks fell for the first time in five
sessions, oil slipped and the dollar saw a slight lift on Thursday, as
markets continued to assess the prospect of falling interest rates after
nearly two years of relentless gains.
Europe's early moves saw the STOXX 600 index dip from a more than
one-month high, while Taiwan's dollar rose after China's President Xi
Jinping and U.S. counterpart Joe Biden agreed to reinstate key military
communications. [.EU]
Global markets have rallied again this week as inflation data out of the
United States and parts of Europe like Britain have reinforced hopes
that major central banks are now done raising borrowing costs.
Robust U.S. retail sales figures on Wednesday were a reminder that it
might not be a straight line move, however, with the focus now on euro
zone data due on Friday.
"If you don't get confirmation of the slowing economic direction from
every single piece of data every single day we risk running out of
momentum on the big trades," Societe Generale FX strategist, Kit Juckes,
said.
"Until we get to the point where rate cuts are just around the corner,
everything is going to be very stop-start. The dollar selloff is
stop-start, the bond market rally is really stop-start and the equity
market is all over the place."
Key government bond market borrowing costs resumed their broad downward
trend on Thursday driven by an increasing confidence that rate cuts are
coming next year.
Germany's 10-year bond yield dipped to 2.62% but held above the previous
day's two-month low of 2.568%. [EUR/GVD]
Asian stocks had fallen overnight as new Chinese data showed continued
weakness in the country's problem-hit property sector which dented
recent optimism about a recovery in the world's second-largest economy.
While data this week showed China's industrial and retail sectors are
making a comeback, figures have also shown a sharp drop in property
investment and weak home prices, underscoring the ongoing drag the
sector is having.
There was mixed news from Japan too, where exports grew for a second
straight month in October but at a sharply slower pace due to slumping
China-bound shipments of chips and steel.
"The weak economic data from both countries indicate the fact that the
global economy is slowing down, highlighting ongoing macro headwinds
that businesses face," said Tina Teng, market analyst at CMC Markets.
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Passersby are reflected on an electric stock quotation board outside
a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan April 18, 2023. REUTERS/Issei Kato/File
Photo
XI AND BIDEN
Australian shares ended their day down 0.7% as strong wage data
indicated that inflationary pressures there were still running high.
Japan's Nikkei dipped 0.3%, moving into reverse after it, along with
the main MSCI Asian and emerging market indexes, all posted their
biggest gains in a year on Wednesday.
China stocks showed some disappointment at Xi and Biden's first
meeting in years, with Shanghai's blue-chip CSI300 index closing
down 1% and Hong Kong's Hang Seng index ending 1.3% lower. [.SS]
While the two leaders agreed to resume military-to-military
communications and cooperate on anti-drug policies, a sign ties were
improving, some investors were disappointed at the lack of other
breakthroughs in the talks.
The MSCI main 47-country global stocks index was down for the first
time in five sessions after a near 8% surge this month. Wall Street
futures pointed to a slightly weaker start. [.N]
Money market traders have now fully priced in that the Federal
Reserve will keep U.S. interest rates steady in December. They see
the first rate cut of the cycle in May.
The yield on benchmark 10-year Treasury notes was back under 4.5%
compared with its U.S. close of 4.537% on Wednesday. The two-year
yield hovered at 4.88% compared with a U.S. close of 4.916%.
In currencies, the euro was flat at $1.0848, having gained 2.5% in a
month, while the dollar index, which tracks the greenback against a
basket of currencies of other major trading partners, was
fractionally higher.
Oil traders, meanwhile, nudged U.S. crude down 0.3% to $76.55 a
barrel. Brent crude was at $80.90 per barrel while safe-haven gold
was slightly higher at $1965 per ounce. [GOL/]
(Additional reporting by Julie Zhu in Hong Kong; Editing by
Christina Fincher)
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