Khaleej Times

Markets end year in the black

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london — Oil prices edged down on Friday but headed for their biggest annual percentage rise since 2009, with world stocks also up nearly 6 per cent over the year despite concerns over China’s slowing growth and weakening currency.

Global markets have fared surprising­ly well in a year marked by major political shocks, including June’s Brexit vote and the unexpected election of Donald Trump as US president in November. US stocks have hit successive record highs and emerging equities have rebounded eight per cent after three years in the red.

Wall Street looked set to add to those gains, with index futures pointing to higher opening levels. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was poised for its best annual performanc­e since 2013.

Britain’s blue-chip FTSE 100 index closed up 0.3 per cent at a record high of 7,142.83 points after a pre-holiday half-day session, having rose more than 23 per cent from lows hit immediatel­y after the June 23 vote to leave the European Union.

MSCI’s world index, which tracks shares in 46 countries, was up 0.1 per cent on Friday, with many investors having booked profits off the benchmark’s 13 per cent run since end-June.

The pan-European STOXX 600 index was up 0.3 per cent. Tokyo stocks closed lower, having erased most of the year’s meagre gains after the yen surged 21 per cent against the dollar.

But oil has been the star of 2016. Brent crude futures have bounced more than 50 per cent after three years of losses, thanks to output cuts by key crude producers. The benchmark fell 16 cents to $56.68 a barrel on Friday.

The year is also notable for the growing chorus of voices calling an end to the three-decade bond bull run. With inflation on the rise, US 10-year yields have hit two-year highs and the European Central Bank has signalled it will start trimming bond purchases.

The dollar pulled back 0.4 per cent on Friday against a currency basket but has strengthen­ed in 2016 for the third straight year, recently hitting near 14-year highs. Britain’s pound, which hit 31-year lows after Brexit vote, is closing 16 per cent lower against the dollar, its biggest yearly fall since 2008.

Gold hit a two-week high on Friday on a weaker dollar and was set to close 2016 more than nine per cent higher, snapping three years of declines. Spot gold was up 0.1 per cent at $1,158.86 an ounce by 1159GMT, having hit its highest since December 14 at $1,163.14. US gold futures rose $2.60 to $1,160.70 an ounce.

 ?? — AP ?? Four-time Olympic wrestling champion Kaori Icho along with Kumamon, the mascot of Japan’s Kumamoto Prefecture, at a ceremony of the last trading day at the Tokyo Stock Exchange.
— AP Four-time Olympic wrestling champion Kaori Icho along with Kumamon, the mascot of Japan’s Kumamoto Prefecture, at a ceremony of the last trading day at the Tokyo Stock Exchange.

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