Kuwait Times

Dollar recoups losses ahead of inaugurati­on

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LONDON: The dollar recouped earlier losses yesterday while stocks were little changed as investors refrained from big bets ahead of Donald Trump’s inaugurati­on as US president and a speech that could shed some light on his economic policies.

Mounting questions about how Trump’s administra­tion would carry out an ambitious agenda of lower taxes, more government spending and looser regulation­s have seen a pause in the post-election rally in risky assets. Concerns over the details of Trump’s inaugurati­on speech offset better-thanexpect­ed economic data from China and comments from Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen in which she sounded less hawkish than the previous day.

Tens of thousands of law enforcemen­t officers and miles of barriers were in place in Washington DC, as officials braced for hundreds of thousands of people planning to celebrate or protest the inaugurati­on of Trump. The dollar, which has lost some of its momentum in recent weeks, was up 0.1 percent against six major currencies.

Stock futures on Wall Street, trading close to all-time highs, were up 0.2 percent recovering some losses from the previous session. “All eyes will be on the content and style of Trump’s inaugurati­on speech,” Morgan Stanley strategist­s led by Hans Redeker wrote in a note.

“The more ‘Presidenti­al’ this speech comes across, the better the outcome for markets,” the strategist­s wrote. European stocks were down 0.1 percent with mining shares, the biggest beneficiar­ies of the reflation rally spurred by Trump’s election win, the biggest drag on the indexes.

Europe’s benchmark index was poised for its worst week since before Trump’s election win last November. Eurozone government bond yields hit one-month highs yesterday on hopes of stronger economic growth and higher inflation. “Trump has been talking very strongly about his desire to invest heavily and deliver fiscal expansion,” said Matt Cairns, fixed income strategist at Rabobank. “Now we’ll see what he has to say as president, and that could be clear soon.”

Fund flows in the run-up to yesterday’s inaugurati­on indicate investors moving into less risky assets and locking in some profits in banking stocks and high-yield debt.

Precious metals funds saw their first inflows in 10 weeks, according to data from fund tracker EPFR and Bank of America-Merrill Lynch while money was pulled from funds focused on financials stocks and high-yield bonds. —Reuters

 ??  ?? NEW YORK: Specialist Jarret Johnson works at his post on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. —AP
NEW YORK: Specialist Jarret Johnson works at his post on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. —AP

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