World stocks still treading water as the dollar gets soggy

London — Signs of a stabilisation in China’s giant economy and a soggy dollar helped oil markets cement their best run for more than three years on Friday, though stocks weren’t buoyed much after spending most of the week treading water.

There was a late flurry of activity, mostly from emerging markets.

China’s data showing exports rebounded nicely last month helped offset weaker imports and reports in Europe of another cut to Germany’s growth forecasts, while Turkey’s lira was back on the ropes amid worries about its trajectory.

The euro, however, gained despite the German growth concerns, and it wasn’t just going rogue, with dealers gearing up for demand from Japan as Mitsubishi UFJ Financial closed in on its multi-billion-euro buy of DZ Bank’s aviation finance business.

Europe’s bourses slowly shook off another groggy start, as did Wall Street futures, which were limbering up for earnings from bulge-bracket banks JPMorgan and Wells Fargo.

“The Chinese data was a little mixed but the money supply numbers were a positive impulse overall,” said TD Securities senior global strategist James Rossiter.

It was oil, though, that provided the big milestones. Brent was at $71.4 a barrel, having broken back through the $70 threshold this week, and US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) was heading for a sixth straight week of gains for the first time since early 2016.

Driving the rise has been involuntary supply cuts from Venezuela, Libya and Iran, which have supported perceptions of a tightening market already underpinned by a production reduction deal from oil cartel Opec and its allies.

“We expect oil prices to eventually move higher in quarter two as Opec+ potentially runs the risk of over-tightening the market by maintaining its current course of action,” Harry Tchilinguirian, strategist at BNP Paribas, told the Reuters Global Oil forum.

Subdued session 

Despite a subdued Asia session, Chinese blue chips managed to recover and close flat after Beijing’s data blitz, while higher Chinese iron ore prices helped push Australia up 0.85%, and Japan’s Nikkei gained too.

In bond markets, Germany’s 10-year government yields nudged back into positive territory but were capped by a report in Der Spiegel magazine that Berlin was set to halve its economic growth forecast for 2019 to 0.5% from 1.0%

That would be more pessimistic than the current 0.8% estimate Germany’s leading economic institutes have penciled in. Worries about limp European growth also made the European Central Bank (ECB) cautious at a policy meeting earlier this week.

Britain’s sterling was a touch higher for both the day and the week.

Christine Lagarde, International Monetary Fund (IMF) MD, said on Thursday that the six-month delay in the country’s exit from the EU avoids the “terrible outcome” of a no-deal Brexit, although did nothing to lift uncertainty over the final outcome.

Underscoring threats to the global economy, IMF deputy MD Mitsuhiro Furusawa had warned that a bigger-than-expected slowdown in China’s economy remains a key risk.

Gold crept higher after falling more than 1% on Thursday to break below the key $1,300 level following solid US data. Spot gold traded at $1,293.24 an ounce.

Reuters

Source: businesslive.co.za