Stocks boosted by U.S. rate relief; dollar elbows yen lower
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[May 07, 2024] By
Amanda Cooper
LONDON (Reuters) - Global shares traded around one-month highs on
Tuesday, boosted by renewed confidence in U.S. interest rate cuts, while
a weaker yen and small dip in the Australian dollar kept the dollar
steady.
Last week saw a dramatic swing in investor expectations for the U.S.
interest rate outlook. Market pricing went from showing even one rate
cut in 2024 looking less likely to almost two being priced in by Friday,
after monthly employment data suggested the labor market is softening.
A hefty sell-off in U.S. stocks early in the week, accelerated by
volatile earnings, reversed, sending the benchmark S&P 500 index up by
the most in a day since February after Friday's payrolls report, and
adding to gains on Monday.
On Tuesday, U.S. futures pointed to a steady start later on, while
stocks in Europe caught a bid from the banks, where UBS and Unicredit
beat expectations, sending the STOXX 600 up 0.6%.
MSCI's All-World index was up 0.1%, around its highest since April 10.
"We remain in the camp that the right question is not whether we will
get one or two rate cuts from the Fed this year," Jefferies strategist
Mohit Kumar said.
"As long as the optionality of Fed cuts on any weakness remains, the Fed
put is intact which will continue to support risky assets," he said.
The "Fed put" refers to a belief among investors that the central bank
will step in to support the economy and financial markets in times of
turmoil.
Futures show traders believe U.S. rates will drop by around 45 basis
points this year, from 5.25-5.50% right now. This time last week, just
28 bps were priced in.
On the earnings front, Disney, Occidental Petroleum and Wynn Resorts are
due to report.
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POWELL POWER
The mood set by last week's softer-than-expected U.S. jobs data was
further underpinned by remarks from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell
reiterating that the next move in rates will be lower.
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Signage for the London Stock Exchange Group is seen outside of
offices in Canary Wharf in London, Britain, August 3, 2023.
REUTERS/Toby Melville/File Photo
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Treasuries, which rallied on Friday's jobs figures, traded steady in
New York overnight and 10-year yields held at 4.49% in Tokyo on
Tuesday. Interest rates markets price at least one U.S. rate cut
this year, in November.
Demand will be tested at a $58 billion three-year note auction on
Tuesday, which is followed by $42 billion in 10-year sales on
Wednesday and $25 billion of 30-year sales on Thursday.
Expectations of falling rates have weighed on the dollar, though
only gently. European policymakers are readying cuts for June,
capping the euro, and rates are not expected to move too far above
zero in Japan this year, leaving a wide gap with the rest of the
world.
The dollar rose 0.6% on the yen on Monday and a further 0.3% to
154.31 yen on Tuesday, keeping markets on edge as to whether
Japanese authorities may step in again.
Traders estimate Japan spent almost $60 billion defending the yen
last week.
Australia's central bank left interest rates on hold, as expected,
but the Aussie dollar slipped about 0.4% to $0.6599 after
policymakers did not strengthen guidance around the risk of another
rate hike.
Sterling eased 0.2% to $1.254, while the euro was 0.1% lower at
$1.07628.
In commodities, oil held steady, with Brent crude futures up 0.1% to
$83.41 a barrel with a ceasefire deal in the Middle East proving
elusive. Gold edged down 0.2% to $2.319 an ounce, still within sight
of recent record highs.
Wheat, corn and soybean traded around multi-month highs on worries
about unfavorable weather in Russia - where it has been frosty and
dry - and Brazil, where there are floods. [GRA/]
(Additional reporting by Tom Westbrook in Singapore; Editing by
Bernadette Baum)
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