Subdued global equities stay close to two-month highs

London — World stocks remained near two-month highs on Monday with the dollar and oil chalking up gains, although some European bourses struggled as momentum from last week’s US employment and manufacturing data bounce started to fade.

The pan-European Stoxx 600 slipped 0.1% in early trading with Paris’s CAC and Frankfurt’s DAX both falling around 0.2%-0.3%.

MSCI’s All Country World index, which tracks stock markets in 47 countries, traded within a whisker of Friday’s two-month high after Hong Kong’s Hang Seng ended a half day of trade up 0.2% while Australian shares and Japan’s Nikkei ended 0.5% higher.

London’s FTSE rose 0.2% to a two-month high after sterling softened against the dollar.

Trade was subdued with many of the region’s markets closed for the Lunar New Year. China’s financial markets are closed all week, while those in South Korea are shut until Thursday.

“The tone we took away from the end of last week and the dovish tilt from the Federal Reserve is positive for risk assets,” Michael Hewson, chief markets analyst at CMC Markets in London.

“The benign outlook for monetary policy should support risk assets but the elephants in the room are Brexit, trade talks and political instability in Europe,” Hewson said, adding he expected Tuesday’s services PMI data to confirm a darkening picture for Europe.

US stock market futures also pointed to a more muted start to the week: S&P 500 and Nasdaq e-mini futures both traded a touch softer.

On Wall Street on Friday, optimism from a surge in January US job growth was offset by a disappointing outlook from Amazon battering retail stocks. The Dow rose 0.26% while the Nasdaq shed 0.25%.

Friday’s US nonfarm payrolls jumped by a stronger-than-forecast 304,000 jobs in January — the largest gain since February 2018. That report, along with better-than-expected January ISM manufacturing activity numbers, pointed to underlying strength in the world’s biggest economy.

However, global equity markets performed strongly last week after the Federal Reserve pledged to be patient with further interest rate hikes, signalling a potential end to its tightening cycle.

Meanwhile in forex markets, the dollar index extended gains for a third consecutive day, strengthening 0.1% against a basket of currencies.

Against the yen, the dollar climbed a third of a percent to ¥109.89 while euro was slightly lower at $1.1447 after getting pulled back from Friday’s high of $1.1488 on Friday.

But analysts were watching closely how long the momentum in the dollar could last.

“Overall, the emergence of stronger than expected US economic data should help to ease downside risks for the US dollar in the near-term following the recent dovish shift in Fed policy,” Lee Hardman at MUFG Bank wrote in a note to clients.

“However, it is unlikely to prove sufficient to trigger a sustained turn around for the US dollar.”

On the day, China’s yuan suffered some of the biggest losses against the dollar, weakening 0.4% in offshore trading. The latest falls took the losses of the yuan over the past two days to more than 1% — falls last seen in August last year when a broader sell-off hammered emerging market assets.

The tumble came despite data showing that China’s sprawling services sector maintained a solid pace of expansion in January albeit at a slower pace, offering continued support for the world’s second-largest economy as manufacturing cools.

The benchmark 10-year US treasury yield was at 2.702% after climbing nearly six basis points on Friday to pull away from a four-week low of 2.619% hit earlier last week.

In the commodity market, spot gold fell more than 0.5% to $1,310.88, moving away from a more than nine-month high of $1,326.30 reached last week.

West Texas Intermediate (WTI) US crude oil futures rose 0.3% to $55.43 a barrel while Brent crude futures added 0.7% to $63.19.

On Friday, WTI futures had rallied 2.7% on the upbeat US job report, signs that Washington’s sanctions on Venezuelan exports have helped tighten supply and data showing US drillers cut the number of oil rigs.

Reuters

Source: businesslive.co.za