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World shares at 13-month peak as Wall St scales 2023 highs

Tan KW
Publish date: Sat, 10 Jun 2023, 08:57 AM
Tan KW
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NEW YORK/LONDON US shares struck new highs for the year on Friday (June 9), and helped lift world stocks to a 13-month peak, as rising bets that the US Federal Reserve (Fed) will skip a rate hike next week overshadowed worries about US markets being drained of cash.

Helped by a surge in Tesla Inc, which jumped as much as 5.7%, the S&P 500 rose to levels last seen in August before paring gains. It finished 0.1% higher, the best close since Aug 16. The Nasdaq Composite added 0.13%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.16%.

Over in Europe, the STOXX 600 index lost 0.13%, but MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan jumped 0.74% overnight. Combined with gains on Wall Street, the MSCI's broadest index of world stocks added 0.18% at a 13-month high. For the week, the index for world stocks might notch a 0.6% rise.

"As of today, the S&P 500 is back in a bull market," said Arthur Hogan, the chief market strategist of Briley Wealth, noting that the index finished Thursday with a 20% gain off its recent lows. "The one thing that could tip over the apple cart is an over-aggressive Fed."

Refinitiv data showed the S&P 500 up 20% from its Oct 12 closing low. The most commonly accepted definition of a bull market is a 20% rise off a low, and a 20% decline from a high for a bear market, but that is open to interpretation.

Traders now lay 73% odds on the Fed keeping rates steady on June 14, in a range of 5%-5.25%, pausing its most aggressive hiking cycle since the 1980s.

Bets for a pause were supported by data on Thursday that showed the number of Americans filing new jobless claims surged to a more than 1½-year high, indicating a loosening labour market that could further quell inflation.

Investors also hope the Fed will pause its rate rise campaign as a quirk of the US debt ceiling negotiations has posed a potential threat to market liquidity.

The US government is expected to rush to sell short-term debt to replenish its Treasury General Account (TGA), potentially at yields so high that banks raise deposit rates to compete for funding, reducing interest in riskier assets like equities.

"We're all worried about liquidity," said Ben Jones, a director of macro research at Invesco. The Fed, he added, "still wants to tighten" policy, and therefore may allow the TGA rebuild to drain liquidity from markets without stepping in to provide other support tools.

This fear was not dominating trading on Friday, however.

Fed chair Jerome Powell said on May 19 it was still unclear whether US interest rates will need to rise further, and the risks of overtightening or undertightening had become more balanced.

Yields up

Uncertainty about the US rates outlook supported Treasury yields.

Two-year Treasury yields, which are extremely sensitive to monetary policy expectations, rose to 4.602%, while the yield on benchmark 10-year notes climbed to 3.743%.

The US dollar index, which measures the performance of the US currency against six others, rebounded 0.21% to 103.47.

The euro slipped 0.32% to US$1.0748, just below Thursday's two-week high of US$1.0787.

Elsewhere, the Turkish lira hit a new record low overnight of 23.54 per dollar, even as President Tayyip Erdogan's appointment of a US banker, as central bank chief sent a strong signal for a return to more orthodox policy.

Erdogan last week put well-regarded former finance minister Mehmet Simsek back in the post. Simsek said this week that the guiding principles for the economy would be transparency, consistency, accountability and predictability.

Leading crypto asset bitcoin dipped 0.2% to US$26,450 after crypto exchange Binance said it was suspending dollar deposits, and would soon pause fiat currency withdrawal channels following a US Securities and Exchange Commission crackdown.

Crude oil edged higher, but gains were tempered by a report that the US and Iran were close to a nuclear deal, although denials from both parties kept it off the previous session's lows.

The prospect of a deal, which reportedly included scope for an additional one million barrels per day of Iranian supply, initially dented crude prices.

Brent crude futures whipsawed over the course on Friday, and ended down 1.3% at US$74.98 a barrel. West Texas Intermediate crude lost 1.3% to US$70.38 a barrel.

 


  - Reuters

 

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