World shares hit their latest in a run of record
highs on Tuesday, while the dollar was at it loftiest in 1-1/2 months as
encouraging U.S. data lifted it in tandem with global bond yields.
Spot gold XAU= edged down 0.1 percent
to $1,270.06 per ounce, plumbing its lowest since Aug. 15 as the dollar
continued to strengthen.
MSCI’s
47-country ‘All-World’ index which contains more than 2,400 firms was
pushed to the fresh peak as Europe’s main bourses added to gains made in
Asia and after Wall Street set its own record close again overnight.
It
was the tenth new high since late July alone and extends the year’s
blizzard of records that started in February to more than 40 with no
sign it is about to run out of steam yet.
SEB
investment management’s global head of asset allocation Hans Peterson
pointed to strong economic and trade data and signs that firms in large
economies like the United States and Europe were finally increasing
investment spending.
The dollar climbed 0.2 percent to 93.74 .DXY against a broad basket of other top world currencies. [/FRX]
That
was its highest level since Aug. 17 and came as a firming view that the
Federal Reserve will raise U.S. interest rate for a third time this
year in December kept two-year U.S. government bond yields US2YT=RR
hovering at a 9-year high.
Borrowing costs
across the euro zone nudged higher too. Southern European bonds
continued to underperform meanwhile as political tensions remained in
Spain after Sunday’s independence vote in Catalonia was marred by police
violence.
The uncertainty also kept the squeeze on the euro. It dipped 0.2 percent to $1.1709 EUR= while the dollar added 0.3 percent against the yen to 113.11 yen JPY= to keep it within reach of last week's two-month high of 113.26 yen.
Crude
oil futures extended losses after tumbling on Monday, as a rise in U.S.
drilling and higher OPEC output put the brakes on their recent rally
and rekindled concerns about oversupply.
Brent
crude LCOc1 slipped 0.4 percent to $55.90 a barrel, after marking a
third-quarter gain of about 20 percent. U.S. crude CLc1 fell 0.3 percent
to $50.42.

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