World shares climb as China promises fiscal stimulus

London — World shares climbed for a third day on Tuesday, as China promised fiscal action to support the world’s second-largest economy, and stellar results from internet giant Alphabet underpinned the tech stocks.

Global bonds remained under pressure on speculation that the Bank of Japan may soon trim its massive stimulus. The euro was choppy as a dip in French business confidence was offset by signs of strength in German manufacturing.

European stocks were also up, partly thanks to some upbeat results from UBS, automotive firm PSA ,and chip maker AMS, but also just riding in the slipstream of Asia’s and Wall Street’s overnight gains.

China’s government bond yields jumped and the offshore yuan hit a one-year low after Beijing’s cabinet said it would pursue a more vigorous fiscal policy and as traders bet on further easing in monetary conditions.

Shanghai blue chips closed up 1.5% at a one-month high and Japan’s Nikkei had added 0.5%, even though a disappointing reading on factory activity suggested the threat of a trade war was starting to bite.

“The big story is that the Chinese currency continues to slide,” said Société Générale forex strategist Alvin Tan. “It is clear the government is moving towards policies that are supporting growth,” he added, saying the trend was likely to bring a reaction from the US in time.

E-Mini futures for the S&P 500 firmed 0.2%, as European bourses shuffled higher.

Tech stocks got a boost from Alphabet, the parent of Google, which jumped 3.6% after hours to a record high, valuing the group at $870bn. This made up for an otherwise dull Monday on Wall Street where the Dow ended down 0.06%, the S&;P 500 gained 0.18%, and the Nasdaq rose 0.28%.

Who will buy these bonds?

Bond bulls were still smarting from speculation that the Bank of Japan is close to scaling back its monetary stimulus, a risk that lifted long-term borrowing costs globally. Markets were worried that Japanese investors would have less incentive to hunt offshore for yield, said ANZ economist Felicity Emmett.

“The 10-basis-point steepening in the Japanese yield curve is massive in the context of a market that rarely moves more than one basis point,” she said. “It reflects a broader fear that central banks are reducing their purchases while US bond supply is set to rise significantly.” As a result, 10-year US Treasury yields reached their highest in five weeks, about 2.96%, and were again nearing the 3% mark.

Germany’s government bond yields rose to a five-week high of 0.416%. Most other eurozone yields were higher by 1-3 basis points.

“Global stocks, Asian stocks in particular, have seen a boost from [potential] policy-easing measures in China and this helps the general risk sentiment and adds to some of the headwinds to bond markets,” said Commerzbank strategist Rainer Guntermann.

GDP guessing games

Part of the shift in yields was caused by talk that data on second-quarter US economic growth, due on Friday, would top current forecasts of 4.1%. Dealers noted that in some media reports US President Donald Trump was predicting an outcome of 4.8%. This would not be out of bounds, given the much-watched Atlanta Fed GDP tracker puts growth at an annualised 4.5%. Such a strong outcome would only add to the risk of faster rate increases from the Federal Reserve and underpin the dollar.

Against a basket of currencies, the dollar was hovering at 94.616 compared with a low of 94.207 on Monday. It bought ¥111.19, against Monday’s trough of ¥110.75.

The euro slipped to $1.1690, having run into profit-taking at a peak of $1.1750 overnight. Turkey’s lira was down 0.5% and looking jumpy before what is expected to be another sharp rate increase later.

In commodity markets, oil prices were flat as the focus turned to oversupply worries and away from escalating tensions between the US and Iran. US crude added 2c to $67.91. Brent edged up 10c to $73.17 a barrel.

Spot gold barely budged at $1,224 an ounce.

Reuters

Source: businesslive.co.za