World shares rise on surprisingly strong Chinese exports

London/Sydney — World shares climbed on Thursday after Chinese exports proved far stronger than even bulls had imagined, while bond investors were still daunted by the staggering amount of US debt set to be sold and a tussle over the European Central Bank (ECB) bond-buying.

Beijing reported exports rose 3.5% in April compared to a year earlier, completely confounding expectations of a 15.1% fall and outweighing a 14.2% drop in imports.

The surprise stoked speculation that the Asian giant could recover from its coronavirus lockdown quicker than first thought and support global growth in the process.

The news had helped Japan’s Nikkei and Seoul’s Kopsi recover from shaky starts and Europe’s main London, Paris and Frankfurt bourses all made 0.4%-0.7% early gains.

E-Mini futures for the S&P 500 fared better with a bounce of 1.2%, though there were ominous signs too. Turkey’s lira fell to a record low amid worries about its dwindling reserves, oil was back under $30 a barrel and Italy’s bond yields hit 2% again.

“It’s clear that this virus has gone from east to west and we are now seeing that in the data,” said Société Générale’s Kit Juckes pointing to the China numbers and relatively better purchasing managing data in countries such as Australia.

But with the full economic effect of Covid-19 still to be known and huge amounts of debt potentially pushing up borrowing costs “the market is hugely split between die-hard bears and buy-on-dip buyers”, Juckes said.

Markets had traded cautiously overnight with renewed China-US tensions lurking in the background.

US President Donald Trump said he would be able to report in about a week or two whether China is meeting its obligations under a trade deal, as Washington weighed punitive action against Beijing over its handling of the coronavirus outbreak.

The flow of economic data also remained grim, with US private employers laying off 20-million workers in April and a Bank of England warning that the coronavirus crisis could cause the country’s biggest economic slump in 300 years.

Figures due later on Thursday are forecast to show initial US jobless claims rose a further 3-million last week, while Friday’s payrolls report is expected to see 22-million jobs lost and unemployment hit 16% or higher.

“Despite their dizzying rally, we continue to be cautious on equities in the near term,” Luca Paolini, chief strategist at asset manager Pictet said. “Markets seem to be overestimating the speed of economic recovery.”

World’s biggest borrower

Bond markets saw one of the largest shifts in a while after the US treasury said it would borrow an astonishing $2.999-trillion during the June quarter, five times larger than the previous single-quarter record.

It will sell $96bn next week alone and a surprising amount of that will be at longer tenors, which pushed up long-term yields and steepened the curve.

Yields on 30-year bonds jumped seven basis points to 1.40%, the largest daily increase since mid-March, while rise in Italy’s yields to more than 2% reflected worries caused by a German court ruling this week targeting the ECB’s bond purchase programme.

France and Spain were also due to sell up to a combined €18.75bn worth of bonds following Germany’s first syndicated bond since 2015, which raised €7.5bn on Wednesday alongside a €3.2bn auction.

The rise in US yields gave a lift to the dollar on most currencies and its index firmed to 100.192. The euro drooped below $1.08, also hurt by a gloomy economic outlook from the European Commission.

Indeed, the single currency sank to its lowest against the yen since late 2016 at ¥114.40, and even the dollar touched a seven-week trough at ¥105.98.

“There’s a lot to like about the yen these days,” said Deutsche Bank’s global head of G10 forex Alan Ruskin. He noted that with rates across the globe falling to all time lows, the yen no longer had a large yield disadvantage.

“Across all of 3-month, 2-year, 5-year, and long-end tenors, the average spread between yen rates and the average of G10 yields are at lows not seen for at least the past three decades,” he said.

The yen was also cheap by many measures, he argued, with fair value put at about 85 per dollar.

In commodity markets, gold had eased on expectations that supplies will grow as bullion refineries resume operations. The metal was last up 0.3% at $1,691.54 an ounce.

Oil prices were slipping back though after a six-session streak of gains, which saw Brent almost double since hitting a 21-year low in April. Brent crude futures were last down 14c at $29.59 a barrel, while US crude eased 19c to $23.85.

Reuters

Source: businesslive.co.za