World stocks hold onto gains, dollar under pressure

Tuesday, 31 December 2019 00:49 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

LONDON (Reuters): World stocks clung to recent gains on Monday following healthy advances in Asia on hopes for a US-China trade deal, a more optimistic growth outlook and a softer dollar, while the euro climbed to a 4-1/2 month high.

Yet European stock markets failed to follow the lead and took a breather following last week’s record highs.

The pan-regional Euro Stoxx 600 STOXX was down 0.3% while Germany’s DAX slipped 0.5%. Banks .SX7P, which had been lagging the 2019 rally, were the only sector to mark small gains in thin year-end trading. “Investors appear to be growing a tad apprehensive about chasing the record setting U.S. equity market risk-reward premise into year-end,” Stephen Innes at AxiTrader wrote in a note to clients. “Much focus continues to fall on the abundance of liquidity offered up by the Fed as a critical driver behind the late-season equity market window dressing.”

Many Asian bourses had marked healthy gains with Chinese blue chips roaring 1.5% higher, bolstered by a report that 2019 retail sales are forecast to rise 8% and expectations that a new benchmark for floating-rate loans could lower borrowing costs and boost flagging economic growth.

Yet Japan’s Nikkei stock index finished its last trading day of the year down 0.76%. The index gained 18.2% in 2019 after dropping 12.8% last year.

Easing trade war worries have offered a lift to global equities this month, putting MSCI’s global equity index on track for a 3.8% rise in December - its fourth straight month of gains. US futures ESc1 NQc1 YMc1 also pointed to a higher open after the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at records on Friday. In currency markets, the dollar index - measuring the currency against a basket of rivals - weakened 0.1% to 96.793 in its third straight session in the red. Thin end-of-year volumes exacerbated the broad weakness in the greenback which on Friday suffered its biggest one-day fall since June.  “The US dollar is the worst performing G10 currency overnight,” said MUFG’s Fritz Louw. “The main drivers of the weaker dollar have likely been risk appetite holding up in the wake of comments from the US pertaining to a Phase One trade deal recently as well as the US Federal Reserve’s continued repo operations.” The weak greenback helped other currencies shine. The euro climbed as high as $1.1211, its strongest level since mid-August. Sterling also benefited, rising 0.2% to $1.3122 against the dollar. Yet the pound was flat against the euro at 85.38 pence amid concerns that Britain could be headed for a disruptive “hard Brexit” at the end of 2020.

China’s yuan held below the key level of 7 per dollar, rising in offshore markets to 6.9752, its highest since 13 December. In fixed income markets, rising risk appetite saw euro zone bond yields rise across the board, with most 10-year bond yields two basis points higher on the day. Germany’s Bund yield stood at -0.23%, heading back toward recent six-month highs. The softer dollar also lifted commodity markets with gold hitting a two month peak.

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