The Jerusalem Post

Global stocks advance to record highs as dollar rises

- • By RICHARD LEONG

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Stock prices across the world climbed to record highs on Tuesday on news euro-zone business activity accelerate­d to its swiftest pace in six years, while the dollar gained on the view the Federal Reserve might raise interest rates in March.

The revived possibilit­y of a US rate hike next month, together with demand for risky assets, propelled bond yields higher but weakened gold prices.

Oil futures rose more than 1% after OPEC said it was sticking to its deal to reduce output.

The rally in equity markets around the globe, led by Wall Street, has been stoked by hopes of tax cuts, infrastruc­ture spending and looser regulation­s from US President Donald Trump and a Republican-controlled Congress.

Details on US fiscal stimuli remained sketchy, but investors seemed patient for progress on these possible programs as they have been assuaged by upbeat company results.

“It does seem like a rally feeding on itself. People are reluctant to sell into this rally,” said John Canavan, a market strategist at Stone & McCarthy Research Associates in Princeton, New Jersey.

MSCI’s world stock index, which tracks shares in 45 nations, rose 1.32 points, or 0.3%, to 445.78 after touching an all-time peak at 445.82.

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 113.02 points, or 0.55%, to 20,737.07 in early afternoon trading, the S&P 500 gained 13.55 points, or 0.58%, to 2,364.71, and the Nasdaq Composite added 25.06 points, or 0.43%, to 5,863.64.

The three US stock indexes hit record intraday highs, led by stronger-than-forecast results from retailers Wal-Mart, Macy’s and Home Depot.

Europe’s benchmark index of 300 leading shares touched its highest since December 2015 and was last up 0.7% at 1,473.28 points. Purchasing-manager index (PMI) reports showed the euro-zone economy expanding much faster and more smoothly than expected.

The FTSEurofir­st 300 index reversed an earlier fall, precipitat­ed by a surprise 62% drop in annual profits for Europe’s biggest bank, HSBC.

Stronger appetite for equities and chances of another US rate increase in the coming months pushed up the dollar index 0.5% to 101.46.

Philadelph­ia Fed President Patrick Harker told Market News Internatio­nal on Monday he would likely support a quarter-point rate increase at the central bank’s March 14-15 meeting.

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