Categories: Finances

Stocks firmer as investors bet banking crisis is behind them By Reuters


© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: The Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE) building is seen in Tokyo, Japan October 1, 2020. REUTERS/Issei Kato

By Huw Jones

LONDON (Reuters) – A steadier tone in global stocks continued on Thursday as investors hoped the banking sector had turned a corner on its recent turmoil to help markets end the quarter on a positive note.

The dollar and prices were stable, with calmer markets allowing investors to focus more on the economy, as Spanish inflation fell more than expected in March.

Global stocks were up 0.3% and on course for a 4.9% quarterly gain.

“We are starting to see a little bit of stabilisation, there is a perception that somehow the banking crisis is behind us,” said Mike Hewson, chief markets analyst at CMC Markets.

“The next few days are going to be a key test of this stabilisation with month end, and quarter end, coming up when you have a lot of funds doing a tidy up, then suddenly it’s where do we go from here?”

In Europe, the STOXX index of 600 leading companies rose 0.8% to hit a two-week high.

Analysts said the relief rally on Wall Street on Wednesday raised spirits among investors, underpinned by firmer U.S. stock index futures on Thursday. The rates-sensitive Nasdaq is up nearly 14% this year and heading for its best quarter in more than two years.

As the dust settles on a wild and volatile ride after Silicon Valley Bank’s collapse unleashed fears of a broader banking crisis, the winners appear to be bonds and large tech companies that tend to benefit when interest rates fall.

Kevin Thozet, investment committee member at Carmignac, said investors were taking stock after a volatile quarter of big swings in the outlook for the economy, inflation and interest rates.

“We are seeing a correlation between risk on and risk off assets working again, which was not the case a year ago,” Thozet said, adding the trajectory of hiking interest rates is coming to an end.

“We think there is value is being long in duration, in buying those bonds issued by well rated issuers in the U.S. or in the euro area,” Thozet said.

GRAPHIC: Whirlwind month for European banks

ASIA HOLD GAINS, ALIBABA UP

Asia’s stock markets held recent gains on Thursday as investors weighed whether a break-up of Chinese conglomerate Alibaba (NYSE:) signals Beijing’s regulatory storm aimed at tech companies might finally be clearing.

MSCI’s index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.5%. Like the it’s recovered from March lows hit as fallout from the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank reverberated around global markets.

, which is heading for a 6% quarterly gain, slipped 0.3% on Thursday.

The U.S. dollar was firm, particularly against the safe-haven Japanese yen, as investors wound back some of the positions built up in the last couple of weeks.

The yen last traded at 132.395 to the dollar.

From the two-year tenor all the way to the 30-year, U.S. yields are below the current Fed funds rate of roughly 4.8% as markets have dramatically re-priced the rates outlook.

Two-year yields were little changed at 4.08%.

In Asia, investors are cheering plans from Alibaba to spin off and separately list its business units as another signal that China wants to welcome back global capital.

“We have repeatedly emphasised that 2023 is the first time in four years that economic, regulatory, and COVID policies have been aligned in a pro-growth, pro-business fashion,” Morgan Stanley (NYSE:) analysts said.

Alibaba shares in Hong Kong, which rose above HK$300 in 2020, traded up 2.5% at HK$96 on Thursday. The broader was up 0.6%.

Elsewhere, steadied at $78.79 a barrel, up 0.65%, and gold, which has surged over the past few weeks, was up 0.2% at $1,967 an ounce.

The euro was steady at $1.08725, while bitcoin was up nearly 1% at $28,631 and set for its best quarter for two years.

Source link

nasdaqpicks.com

Share
Published by
nasdaqpicks.com

Recent Posts

Investors shift focus to gold ETFs as equities turn volatile

Despite small-cap funds seeing a deluge of money from investors, inflows into mutual fund equity…

1 minute ago

EU ‘completely overshooting’ on green rules, Siemens Energy boss warns

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories…

5 minutes ago

MAHE conducts first convocation for online graduates

Manipal Academy of Higher Education (MAHE) conducted the very first convocation for online graduates recently.…

8 minutes ago

Ashok Leyland reports a 31% surge in Q3 net profit, boosted by margin growth & tax credits

Ashok Leyland Ltd, one of India’s leading truck and bus manufacturers, recorded a 31 per…

15 minutes ago

US inflation unexpectedly increases to 3% in January

Stay informed with free updatesSimply sign up to the US inflation myFT Digest -- delivered…

21 minutes ago

MCA extends dematerialisation deadline for private firms to June 2025

The Centre has given private companies —other than Producer companies—more time to comply with an…

22 minutes ago