* Hopes for monetary easing lifts China's shares
* World stocks flatline near record highs, in best year since 2009
* Trade deal lifted Wall Street to record closing high
* Pound flat below $1.30 vs post-election high above $1.35 (There will be no London-based Global Markets report on Dec 25 and 26 due to the Christmas holiday)
By Sujata Rao
LONDON, Dec 24 (Reuters) - World stocks flatlined near record highs on Tuesday and remained on track for their best year in a decade, as China's latest policy easing pledges added to the optimism generated by signs of detente in the 17-month long Sino-U.S. trade war.
Blue-chip shares in China .CSI300 rose 0.7% after Premier Li Keqiang said the government was considering more measures to lower corporate financing costs and hinted at "targeted" cuts in banks' reserve requirement ratio. also on Monday announced plans to remove import tarriffs on a range of goods next year. lingering trade concerns and the recent run of gains kept most bourses under pressure, with Korean shares weakening 0.7%, pressured by Monday's data that showed exports in the first 20 days of the month had fallen again.
MSCI's index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS was likewise flat while its all-country benchmark was unchanged, having added 3% this month and 24% since the start of 2019 .MIWD00000PUS .
A pan-European equity index .STOXX also hovered near record highs though many continental markets were closed for Christmas and others saw thin trading volumes .STOXX .
"It's been a strong run up to Christmas for stock markets and it seems traders are taking a little breather in this shortened trading week," said Craig Erlam, an analyst at online broker OANDA.
"It's been a good few weeks for investors, spurred primarily by the de-escalation in the trade war, with Trump only this weekend claiming it will be signed very shortly."
He was referring to comments by President Donald Trump on Saturday, which spurred Wall Street to new all-time highs on Monday. The S&P 500 hit its eighth straight intraday record .SPX .
New York was also lifted by a 3% surge in Boeing (NYSE:BA) which sacked CEO Dennis Muilenberg over the crisis surrounding its 737 MAX jetliner that followed two fatal crashes. futures hinted at a flat to firmer open for Wall Street ESc1 YMc1 .
STELLAR YEAR BUT WHAT NEXT
World markets are heading into the end of a stellar year, with most major asset classes, from emerging market bonds to U.S. tech shares, enjoying robust returns.
But uncertainty remains on how long the trade truce will last as Trump kicks off his re-election campaign next year.
Worries have also resurfaced about how Britain will navigate the transition period for its exit from the European Union. Those concerns pushed sterling to a near four-week low versus the euro and a three-week trough against the dollar EURGBP=D3
GBP=D3 .
The pound was flat at $1.2927 versus highs above $1.35 after the Dec. 12 general election. Against the euro it was at 85.720 pence, coming off the Dec. 13 highs of 82.780 pence.
"Risks to the outlook receded this year, which supported financial markets, but we cannot say the same thing about next year," said Hiroshi Miyazaki, senior economist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) Securities in Tokyo.
Euro zone bond markets were shut but 10-year U.S. Treasury yields slipped one basis point to 1.926% after Monday's slight rise following lacklustre demand for two-year bills at auction Another bond auction is due on Tuesday.
However, yields have risen more than 20 basis points off the 1.69% levels of early December, lifted by the equity rally and signs the U.S. Federal Reserve has paused its rate-cutting cycle.
In Japan, two-year bond yields hit 16-month highs after the message from the minutes of the Bank of Japan's meeting prompted money markets to erase rate cut expectations. oil futures ticked up 0.2% after Russia's energy minister said cooperation with OPEC to support prices would continue. U.S. crude inventory data, due on Tuesday, is also forecast to show a second straight weekly decline. O/R
https://tmsnrt.rs/2PIlIJT Global markets in 2019
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