Tuesday, 21 November 2017

European Stocks Drift as Bonds Rise; Dollar Slips: Markets Wrap

European Stock Markets

European stocks struggled for traction and bonds across the region followed Treasuries higher after the European Central Bank was said to be likely to make only small adjustments to its guidance on monetary policy next year.



The Stoxx Europe 600 Index was little changed, with construction and retail stocks leading the decline.  German shares slipped as the country’s political stalemate continued.

 Earlier, stocks in Asia recovered some of their recent losses, with Chinese equities rallying as investors reassessed a crackdown on shadow banking that had shaken confidence. The euro steadied after dropping the most in three weeks on Monday, and the dollar nudged lower.

Meanwhile, sterling inched higher amid reports Prime Minister Theresa May has the backing of ministers to offer the European Union more money to break the Brexit deadlock. Turkey’s lira hit a record low against the dollar but pared some of the drop after its central bank tightened liquidity.

Investor focus stayed on Europe after officials said the ECB is likely to make multiple small adjustments to its guidance on monetary policy next year rather than any major change in language as it ends quantitative easing.

Political developments in Germany are being closely watched even though some have concluded that economic growth won’t be threatened by the collapse in talks between Merkel and potential coalition partners. The German Chancellor said she would prefer new elections if she can’t put together a majority.

In the U.S., confirmation that Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen will leave the board in February creates a fourth vacancy for President Trump to fill, making it trickier for investors to bet on the central bank’s interest rate trajectory next year.

While the Thanksgiving holiday gives traders an excuse to pause, equities are heading into the end of the year near their peaks, with investors optimistic about global growth and company earnings.

Elsewhere, the Australian dollar dropped to a five-month low after suggestions from the central bank that interest rates will stay lower for longer. West Texas oil rose toward $57 a barrel before U.S. government data forecast to show crude stockpiles resumed declines.

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