Cape Argus

Stocks recover as investors shift focus to Fed minutes

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STOCK markets rode out the latest rise in tensions over North Korea yesterday, the major markets in both Europe and Asia inching higher as attention moved to minutes from the US Federal Reserve’s last meeting.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.3%, regaining half the losses it saw on Tuesday, when North Korea fired a missile into Japanese waters.

The organisati­on’s global shares index gained 0.1%, helped by early gains for most of Europe’s major markets.

A shift towards more hawkish language by several major central banks has dominated the past week and left markets unsure of how much longer emergency stimulus in Europe will continue to support global asset prices.

For now, investors seem to be giving policymake­rs the benefit of the doubt that the global economy can take any tightening of monetary policy, although the latest data was mixed – strong in Europe and weaker in China.

The Fed minutes will be searched by investors for signs of more concern among policymake­rs about a downturn in inflation and activity in the US.

“North Korea has rattled markets, but central bankers are more important,” Kathleen Brooks, a research director at City Index in London, said.

South Korea’s main index rebounded by 0.36% and Japan’s Nikkei ended up 0.25% up.

Shanghai stocks rose more than 1%, despite a drop in the Caixin/Markit services purchasing managers’ index (PMI) to 51.6 last month, from 52.8 in May.

IHS Markit’s final composite PMI for the euro zone was 56.3 last month, down from May, but comfortabl­y beating a flash estimate, chalking up the best performanc­e last quarter in over six years.

Currency markets were in limbo, the euro trading just over half a cent below last week’s 14-month highs against the dollar.

The dollar and yen were the main victims of the shift in language last week, but many analysts wonder whether the European Central Bank will be able to rein in money-printing later this year if the euro keeps gaining.

The dollar was less than 0.1% higher against the basket of currencies used to measure its broader strength and 0.1% lower at $1.1353 per euro. – Reuters

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