Philippine Daily Inquirer

WORLD STOCKS HIT RECORD HIGH AS UPBEAT DATA BOOST CONFIDENCE

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TOKYO— Global stocks hit a record high on Friday and Asian markets rose to their best levels in more than two years as upbeat data on US manufactur­ing and employment and buoyant European factory growth boosted investor optimism.

The MSCI ACWI, an index of 46 stock markets in the world, rose 0.2 percent to a record high. It was on track for a gain of 0.6 percent for the week and close to 11 percent for the year to date.

European shares were also expected to advance, with spreadbett­ers looking at gains of 0.6-0.7 percent for Germany’s DAX, France’s CAC and Britain’s FTSE.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan gained 0.6 percent, while Japan’s Nikkei rose 1.6 percent, topping the psychologi­cally important 20,000-point mark and taking the benchmark to its highest level since August 2015.

“Market sentiment is very good. The strength in Wall Street shares will be a tailwind for the Nikkei as well,” said Masahiro Ichikawa, senior strategist at Sumitomo Mitsui Asset Management.

Wall Street’s volatility index, which measures implied volatility of stocks and is often seen as investors’ fear gauge, fell below 10, near a decade-low touched last month, in another sign of investors’ confidence that markets will be stable at least for the time being.

The Institute for Supply Management said its barometer of US factory activity edged up to 54.9 last month from 54.8 in April, while ADP reported private payrolls grew by 253,000 last month, beating analysts’ median forecast of a 185,000 increase.

Those numbers offset weakness in auto sales and set markets up for solid government payroll data due at 12:30 GMT.

“The US slowdown in the first quarter was due to soft consumptio­n. But consumer spending has started to recover already in March,” said Haruka Kazama, senior economist at Mizuho Research Institute.

“Labor market conditions are improving as we can see from yesterday’s ADP data, which also supports consumptio­n.”

Following the latest data, the Atlanta Federal Reserve upgraded its closely-watched GDP Now forecast for April-June growth to a 4.0 percent annual- ized pace from 3.8 percent.

Further signs of solid US growth led traders to almost fully price in the chance that the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates at its June 13-14 policy meeting. They also supported the outlook for possibly another hike by the year-end, likely in September.

That helped the dollar recover in the foreign exchange market, although traders said concerns about US politics could cap its gains.

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