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Shares soar to record highs on global recovery hopes

Published 01/07/2021, 07:24 PM
Updated 01/08/2021, 04:05 AM

By Tom Arnold and Andrew Galbraith

LONDON/SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Global shares rallied, with Japan's Nikkei hitting a three-decade peak, while U.S. Treasuries extended their steepest sell-off in months on Friday as investors looked beyond rising coronavirus cases and political unrest in the United States to focus on hopes for an economic recovery later in the year.

Europe's Euro STOXX 600 opened up 0.7%, with Frankfurt's index up 0.8% after German industrial output and exports rose in November.

U.S. S&P 500 e-mini stock futures also pointed to a cheery open, rising 0.51%.

The upbeat mood came after Wall Street hit record highs on Thursday, while bond prices fell as markets bet a new Democratic-controlled U.S. government would lead to heavy spending and borrowing to support the country's economic recovery.

Investors were also awaiting U.S. non-farm payrolls data due later in the day to gauge the jobs market's health.

"Investors are buying the end of an erratic Trump administration and looking forward to something new, which is a Biden presidency and the prospect of a significant spending programme," said Francois Savary, chief investment officer at Swiss wealth manager Prime Partners.

"People are going for cyclical names and this is driving the market forward but there has to be care taken as this relies on a rebound in the economy in the coming quarters."

The MSCI world equity index, which tracks shares in almost 50 countries, rose 0.4%, extending its push into record territory and set to close out its best week since late November.

In Asia, South Korea's Kospi led the way, charging 4% higher, its best daily showing in nearly seven months, while the Nikkei added 2.36%, hitting its highest level since August 1990. The dollar-denominated Nikkei share average rose above its 1989 peak to a record high.

Bucking the trend, Chinese blue-chip shares fell 0.3%, retreating from a 13-year high, after index providers MSCI and FTSE Russell said they would cut three Chinese telecom companies from their benchmarks after the close on Friday in response to a U.S. investment ban.

The announcements, which means global funds have one day to adjust billions of dollars of passive investments, wiped a combined $5.6 billion off the value of their Hong Kong-traded shares on Friday.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng rose 1.1% despite reports that the Trump administration was considering banning U.S. entities from investing in an expanded list of Chinese companies in the waning days of his presidency.

On Thursday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.69%, the S&P 500 gained 1.48% and the Nasdaq Composite added 2.56% - with all three indexes finishing at record closing highs.

The gains follow expectations that Democratic control of both U.S. houses of Congress will help the party of President-elect Joe Biden push through larger fiscal stimulus and comes despite political unrest in Washington, DC.

U.S. government officials have begun weighing removing President Donald Trump from office before Biden's inauguration date of Jan. 20, after Trump supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol building.

Rising risk appetite weighed on bonds, with the benchmark 10-year bond yield scaling a fresh high since March. Ten-year notes yielded 1.1% on Friday, up from 1.017% on Thursday.

The dollar held onto its gains helped by the rising yields. The dollar index gained 0.35% against a basket of currencies to 90.121 with the euro down 0.45% to $1.2216.

"We're sure to see a synchronised global recovery in the second half of this year," said ING analyst Carsten Brzeski.

"Right now, there's lots of concern about the virus and noise surrounding the vaccine. But we need to take a slightly longer view."

Cryptocurrency bitcoin fell about 2% to $38,733 after topping $40,000 for the first time on Thursday on high demand from institutional and retail investors. Market watchers have said a pullback is likely following its recent run-up.

In commodity markets, oil traders continued to focus on Saudi Arabia's pledge to deepen production cuts.

Brent crude was up 0.51% at $54.66 a barrel, near 11-month highs. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) rose 0.45% to $51.06. Both benchmarks are on track for weekly gains of more than 5%.

Spot gold dipped 1.3% to $1,888.46 per ounce as the U.S. dollar and Treasury yields firmed.

Latest comments

All to fall down next week onwards. Make the move from wall street to real street.
All to fall down next week onwards....
Euphoria markets will bring tsunami soon. The huge debts are piling high. Save some cash for the coming disaster.
we will be back to normal by q3 2020 and stock market goes ath. same stuff smoking still but market continue to go higher than ath. lol. nowhere better than placing your money in the US stock market, literally free money.
Tighten your seatbelt. We are going down very soon!
This is one off the biggest bubbles iv ever seen. It can only end one way... get out while your ahead.
These headlines are desperate. So desperate.
now for almost a year, stocks have gone  up only on hopes for global recovery. Just speak the truth. Stocks are going up cuz dollar is becoming trash.
rise in cases is bullish because we can have recovery hopes to add to stimulus hopes
they hope the economy to reach 2019 level in 2021. Let's double market indexes on that basis.
market has recovered long back. This is bull run beyond recovery.
I hope I get to do this again but better
I would like to never hear the word hope again.
revived recovery doesn't sound smart when it comes to 240k cases and 4k deaths per day only in the US.
The fraud spreads around the globe, as the DOW and NASDAQ are hand placed above "critical" levels, and the US Ponzi Scheme defrauds America once again.
The American index fund managers make Bernie Madoff look like the Pope.
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