Global Stock Markets
World shares were set for their best week of gains in six
years on Friday after two consecutive weeks in the red, shrugging off a
rise in global borrowing costs while the dollar hit its lowest since
2014.
Yields across the euro area were mostly steady, although Germany’s benchmark Bund was within sight of 2-1/2-year highs and set for its biggest weekly rise in eight weeks.
MSCI’s world index of stocks, which tracks shares
in 47 countries, was up 0.3 percent after European bourses opened. After
suffering its biggest weekly drop since August 2015 last week, the
index is now on track for its best showing since early December 2011.
Some
investors have been puzzled at the quick rebound, which has coincided
with a rise in bond yields on signs that inflation is starting to creep
up globally.
The argument commonly offered by economists
has been that historically, it is not unusual for stocks and bond
market borrowing costs to rise in tandem in a rapidly expanding economy.
Yields across the euro area were mostly steady, although Germany’s benchmark Bund was within sight of 2-1/2-year highs and set for its biggest weekly rise in eight weeks.
Investors were also watching for a sovereign debt rating update on Greece from Fitch, set for release later in the day.
European
shares were also set to chalk up healthy weekly gains, snapping a
three-week losing streak as earnings updates continued to impress, and
volatility and jitters over rising inflation eased.
Among
country benchmarks, the UK’s FTSE was up 0.6 percent and Germany’s DAX
added 0.5 percent, while Italy’s FTSE MIB was up 1 percent.
The
pan-European benchmark is up 3 percent so far this week, set for its
best week since December 2016, but still down around 6 percent from the
2-1/2-year peak it hit in January.
With many Asian
markets closed on Friday for the Lunar new year, MSCI’s broadest index
of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.3 percent.
Japan’s
Nikkei rose 1.2 percent, with investors relieved to see the government
appoint Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda for another term,
suggesting the central bank will be in no rush to dial back its massive
stimulus programme.
Equity investors have drawn a degree
of reassurance from a fall in the VIX index - a measure of implied
volatility on the S&P 500 index, also known as Wall Street’s “fear
gauge”.
The index dropped below 20 for the first time
since it spiked to a 2-1/2-year high of 50.3 last week, a jump that
caused massive losses among investors who bet equity markets would stay
stable on a combination of solid economic growth and moderate inflation.

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