The Pak Banker

Global shares stall near record high as year draws to close

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World stocks stalled near record highs and currency markets were little changed on Monday as trading dwindled before the Christmas holiday and investors took profit on gains made this month.

The pan-European STOXX 600 index was down 0.14% by 0851 GMT, after nearing a record high in the previous session. MSCI's broadest index of AsiaPacifi­c shares outside Japan was near its highest since June 2018, up 0.05%.

The MSCI all-country stock index was flat, just below Friday's record high. It has risen nearly 3% this month as U.S.-China trade tensions eased and confidence grew that Britain would avoid a chaotic exit from the European Union. The index is up 23% so far in 2019, set for its best year since 2009.

U.S. President Donald Trump said on Saturday the United States and China would "very shortly" sign phase one a trade agreement. It calls for the United States to reduce some tariffs in exchange for China's buying more American farm products. China said on Monday it would lower tariffs on products ranging from frozen pork and avocado to some types of semiconduc­tors next year.

"The Phase 1 (P1) agreement and UK elections have cleared up tail risks, but the market is now transcendi­ng that euphoria," said Stephen Innes, strategist at AxiTrader.

"While P1 is already reflected in stock prices, positionin­g is still relatively light, and with plenty of capital yet to be deployed, markets could even push significan­tly higher supported by the global growth rebound," he added.

Earlier, the U.S. benchmark S&P 500 .SPX extended its record highs to seven straight sessions, its longest streak in more than two years. All three major U.S. indexes - the S&P 500, Nasdaq and Dow - gained. Data showed U.S. growth rose in the third quarter and the economy was probably maintained its expansion as the year ended. Consumer spending was stronger than previously reported, and there were upgrades to business spending.

During Asian hours on Monday, Japan's Nikkei . N225 was little changed after reaching a 14-month top last week. It was up 2.3% for the month so far.

Chinese stocks posted their worst single-day drop in six weeks, weighed down by a correction in tech shares after a state fund announced plans to cut its stakes in some chip makers. The U.S. personal consumptio­n expenditur­e deflator for November, is the only major economic report this week.

In currency markets, the euro EUR= was at $1.1083, up 0.05% after slipping 0.4% last week. Sterling GBP= was at $1.3027, edging up 0.18% from Friday's three-week low of $1.2976. It slid 2.6% last week for its worst weekly showing since October 2017. The safe-haven Japanese yen was down 0.08% at 109.35. JPY= That left the dollar index at 97.604, down 0.09% against six major currencies. In commoditie­s, Brent crude was down 23 cents to $65.95 a barrel. West Texas Intermedia­te crude slipped 24 cents to $60.2 a barrel.

Euro zone bond yields drifted lower on Monday as investors plumped for the safety of safe-haven government debt in thin pre-holiday trade.

French, German and Dutch 10-year bond yields last week hit their highest levels in around six months after Sweden's central bank ended five years of negative interest rates - reinforcin­g a sense in markets that major central banks may be done with pushing borrowing costs further below zero.

But they dipped 1-2 basis points on Monday, reflecting demand for safe-haven sovereign debt ahead of Christmas.

Germany's benchmark 10-year Bund was just 1 bps lower at -0.26%, about 5 bps below last week's high.

Still, it has risen almost 50 bps from record lows set in early September - reflecting an easing of worries over Brexit and a bitter U.S./China trade conflict and some signs that the worst may be over for the euro zone economy.

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