Kuwait Times

World stocks rise towards record high

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LONDON:

World stocks rose to a whisker off all-time highs yesterday and the dollar rose for the 11th straight day following Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen’s flagging of a possible interest rate rise next month. The dollar notched up its longest winning streak in almost five years after Yellen said on Tuesday the Fed would probably need to raise rates at an upcoming meeting and that delaying could leave the central bank’s policymaki­ng committee behind the curve.

Propelled by record highs on Wall Street, MSCI’s benchmark global equity index rose 0.25 percent to 442.4 points , its highest since May 2015 and two points off its record high. It has not fallen for six sessions, its longest such run since last July.

“The simple act of leaving a March (US) hike on the table, given that it had been all but written off by investors, is what triggered such a reaction,” said Craig Erlam, senior market analyst at Oanda.

Europe’s index of leading 300 stocks rose nearly 1 percent earlier to its highest since December 2015, but by mid-session had settled back to trade up 0.4 percent on the day at 1,465 points. Germany’s DAX was up 0.2 percent and Britain’s FTSE was up 0.5 percent, boosted by sterling’s slide after soft UK wage growth data. Yellen’s remarks helped push Wall Street by boosting US bank stocks. Goldman Sachs shares hit a record high, and are up 37 percent since the US presidenti­al election on Nov 8. Financials also led the way in Europe, with Credit Agricole up more than 3 percent after France’s biggest retail bank beat forecasts with a smaller than expected earnings drop in the fourth quarter.

Six of the top 10 gainers in Europe were banks. MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.7 percent, rising to its highest since July 2015. Japan’s Nikkei added more than 1 percent, buoyed by a weaker yen. US futures pointed to a flat open on Wall Street.

PUNCHY DOLLAR

The dollar index against a basket of major currencies chalked up its longest winning streak since May 2015. It was up 0.2 percent at 101.220, near a fourweek high of 101.380 scaled overnight.

Yellen’s remarks rekindled expectatio­ns in some quarters for the Fed to raise rates three times in 2017 rather than twice. The futures market did not share this view amid doubts about the US economy’s ability to sustain three hikes. Yellen testifies to Congress again yesterday, this time to the House of Representa­tives.

According to CME Group’s Fed-Watch data, US interest rate futures implied an around 30 percent chance of at least three increases this year, little changed from the previous day - though the chance rose above 40 percent immediatel­y after Yellen’s comments. “That kind of rate re-think is dollar-friendly, but too timid to derail the risk rally that starts in US equities and spreads into emerging market currencies,” said Kit Juckes, head of FX strategy at Societe Generale in London.

The dollar was a shade higher at 114.40 yen after rising to a two-week high of 114.50 the previous day, while the euro slipped to a one-month low of $1.05525. It was last at $1.0560.

Sterling was the big mover in FX, sliding 0.5 percent to $1.2410 after figures showed that UK wage growth slowed unexpected­ly at the end of last year, thereby cooling inflationa­ry pressures and the need for tighter monetary policy. The dollar was supported as US Treasury yields rose on the Fed Chair’s comments, with the benchmark 10-year yield climbing four basis points to an 11-day high of 2.50 percent the previous day. They were last at 2.48 percent.

The stronger dollar, which puts non-US buyers of dollar-denominate­d commoditie­s at a disadvanta­ge, weighed on crude oil prices. US crude was down 0.6 percent at $52.86 a barrel and Brent also shed 0.6 percent to $55.65 a barrel. Crude already came under pressure the previous day on evidence of surging US stockpiles. —Reuters

 ??  ?? TOKYO: A man walks past an electric quotation board flashing the Nikkei key index of the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE) in front of a securities company in Tokyo yesterday. —AFP
TOKYO: A man walks past an electric quotation board flashing the Nikkei key index of the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE) in front of a securities company in Tokyo yesterday. —AFP

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