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Stocks start week in upbeat mood as recovery bets dominate

Published 04/25/2021, 08:42 PM
Updated 04/26/2021, 05:51 AM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A passersby wearing a protective face mask is reflected on screen displaying the Japanese yen exchange rate against the U.S. dollar and stock prices at a brokerage, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Tokyo

By Tommy Wilkes

LONDON (Reuters) - European stocks clawed their way higher on Monday as world markets began the week in a relatively upbeat mood following further signs last week that economies are recovering rapidly.

The start to the week was relatively quiet, however, as investors refrain from taking on large positions ahead of a two-day Federal Reserve meeting beginning on Tuesday and quarterly gross domestic product numbers for the United States.

But the general sentiment remained bullish with Wall Street hitting another intraday record-high on Friday and European shares not far off record highs in early Monday trading.

The broader Euro STOXX 600 gained 0.23% while Germany's DAX rose 0.22%. Britain's FTSE 100 climbed 0.21%.

Asian shares also rallied where MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan reached its highest since March 18, despite a late sell-off in Chinese shares.

Wall Street futures pointed to a slightly weaker open.

The MSCI world equity index, which tracks shares in 49 countries, rose 0.2%.

Stocks are basking in a massive rally - the MSCI world index has suffered only three down months in the past 12 and is up nearly 5% this month and 9% for the year as investors bet on a rapid post-pandemic economic rebound turbocharged by vast government and central bank stimulus.

Analysts, however, say stocks look a little too confident and that the rally will run into hurdles after setting such a lightning pace and with so much of the recovery and fiscal stimulus splurge already priced in.

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"The real crux of the issue, however, is what's in the price. The year-to-date rally has increasingly eliminated upside to our targets," noted Andrew Sheets, a strategist at Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS).

"Across four major global equity markets (the U.S., Europe, Japan and emerging markets), only Japan is currently below our end-2021 strategy forecast."

BOLSTER CONFIDENCE

Still, recent data pointing to a solid global economic recovery has only served to bolster confidence. Strong corporate earnings and the continued rollout of COVID-19 vaccinations in developed economies have also supported sentiment.

Early April manufacturing activity indicators out last week pointed to a robust start to the second quarter with data hitting record highs in the United States and signalling an end to Europe's double-dip recession.

First-quarter U.S. gross domestic product data due later in the week is likely to show activity probably returned to pre-pandemic levels, analysts said.

"We estimate that the economy will close the output gap and rise above potential in the second half of this year," ANZ economists wrote in a morning note, suggesting more upside for shares.

"(Europe) cannot match this, but as 2021 progresses into 2022, the growth differential to the U.S. will narrow," they added.

In bond markets, government debt yields rose as investors dumped safer assets.

The U.S. 10-year Treasury yield rose 1 basis point to 1.5773% but that is some way off the plus 1.7% levels hit earlier this month when fears about a spike in inflation rattled markets.

In currencies, the dollar -- which had benefited from rising Treasury yields - fell against a basket of currencies to its weakest since early March -- another sign of the bullish mood of global investors this month.

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Turkey's lira edged lower, adding to a recent slide and nearing an all-time low as a chill settled on relations with the United States and after the new central bank chief signalled that rate hikes would harm the economy.

In commodities, U.S. crude fell 57 cents to $61.57 per barrel and Brent eased 57 cents to $65.64.

Gold climbed 0.1% to $1,779 an ounce.

Latest comments

I know quality comes at a price. That's why I'll wait for stonks hitting at least 5-10K on SPX, before I mortgage my home.
How can the article say World economic recovery is well on the way? The only economy that's performed last year was China. If you think the Banking Crisis was bad? That is the tip of the iceberg compared to the state of the economy today. I believe it will take us 20 years plus to recover. The FED needs to learn you can't print your way out of a crisis. Closures, bankruptcies, mass unemployment and inflation like we have never seen is on it's way. Physical silver and gold is the only way to go. Stay safe
any proves, sofa master?
Japan has the highest debt in the world, for many many years now. People there are living fine. These levels of debt will be the new normal. For now.
indian market is rapidly rising. Maybe they talk about hopes and near economy rebound
The article said the chinese market is at three weeks high, not India...
in any ambiguous situation - buy
China is about to embark on a super spreader holiday next week. Economy is always above lives. China will look like India next, no doubt.
I ain't wumao... I like the truth... Go listen to Tim Cook, Elon Musk, Starbucks, Disney, etc. all said China did the best job at containment...
 Tim - wants to sell iphones, gonna shill for china, Same with Elon now with all the anti trust lawsuites in china. Starbucks needs to sell in china for QoQ profit, and Disney needs to air movies... Sorry, not interested in companies with inherent business profitability tied to china. You are still a wumao, who would lie and shill
lol... also many YouTubers show China back to normal way back from last year. China has complete control and people follow rules and order... the world needs to learn from China but they are too jealous to admit...
so fed up with eyes on fed headlines.
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