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World stocks up, dollar dips as Fed officials calm inflation fears

Published 2021-05-13, 10:29 p/m
Updated 2021-05-14, 05:00 a/m
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: First trading day of stock market in Tokyo

By Simon Jessop and Kevin Buckland

LONDON/TOKYO (Reuters) - Global stocks rose and the dollar dipped on Friday after U.S. Federal Reserve officials said there would be no imminent move to tighten monetary policy in the world's biggest economy.

The bounce, extending a late recovery in the prior session, interrupted a three-day rout for stocks globally, amid market jitters over accelerating U.S. inflation.

The MSCI World Index, a broad gauge of equity markets globally, was up 0.4% in early European trading, adding to Thursday's 0.4% gains after a loss of more than 4% since the start of the week.

The STOXX Europe 600 Index was up 0.3% at 0827 GMT, giving back some of its early gains, while the FTSE 100, Europe's biggest index, was up 0.6%.

The gains followed overnight strength in Asia, where Tokyo's Nikkei jumped 2.3%, while MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan gained 0.8% and Chinese blue chips rose 2.4%.

U.S. stock futures pointed to a higher open on Wall Street, with S&P 500 futures up 0.5% and its Nasdaq peer up 0.8%.

After a higher than expected inflation print had spooked markets earlier in the week, Fed official Christopher Waller signalled overnight that rates would not rise until policymakers either see inflation above target for a long time or excessively high inflation.

"From 2004 to 2008 the Fed raised rates from 1 to 5.25 percent. However, the massive public and private debt levels limit the Fed in how much interest rates can increase this time without too much damage to the overall economy," said Louise Dudley, Global Equities Portfolio Manager, at the international business of Federated Hermes.

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With so-called 'growth' stocks, those expected to post higher-than-average returns, trading on higher valuations than their more staid peers, Dudley said now was the time to change tack.

"Stocks with more attractive valuations and slower growth will do well in a higher interest rate environment. Investors will do well focusing on valuation this year even if interest rates do not surprise on the upside."

Looking ahead, traders will wait for the release of a fresh batch of U.S. data including April retail sales, industrial production and capacity utilisation, while the Dallas Federal Reserve President is also set to speak.

In Europe, meanwhile, the European Central Bank is set to publish the accounts of its April meeting.

Benchmark 10-year Treasury yields were down fell by nearly 4 basis points overnight and eased further to trade at 1.6420%. [US/]

After holding steady in Asia overnight, the U.S. currency extended losses against a basket of its major peers, with the dollar index down 0.3% at 90.46, taking a breather after recent strong gains.

"Treasury yields are higher this week, but only by 5bp, which is less of a rise than in Europe, and a pretty modest reaction to the CPI data," Societe Generale (PA:SOGN) analyst Kit Juckes said in a note.

"Either the US inflation uptick is temporary, or the Fed is dangerously complacent. Either way, we’re going to see tolerance of higher inflation tested further in the months ahead."

BITCOIN BOUNCE

Gold extended gains to trade up 0.5% at $1,834 an ounce, helped by the pullback in the dollar.

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Oil prices hovered around flat on the day as investors focused on high coronavirus cases in key consumer India and the return to action of a top U.S. fuel pipeline network after being shut due to a cyber attack. [O/R]

Brent crude was down 0.1% at $66.99 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude was up 0.1% at $63.87 a barrel.

In cryptocurrencies, bitcoin recovered to trade just above $50,000 on Friday, after plunging to a 2-1/2-month low of $45,700 in the previous session when a media report of a regulatory probe into crypto exchange Binance added to pressure from Tesla Inc chief Elon Musk reversing his stance on accepting the digital currency.

Latest comments

Funny how the markets believe Fed speak when they’ve been wrong and reactive for the past 4 years !
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