Trade-Talk Progress Lifts Global Stocks
December 12 2018 - 6:01AM
Dow Jones News
By David Hodari
Global stocks gained Wednesday on a fresh wave of trade
optimism, shrugging off a leadership challenge against embattled
U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May.
Stocks in Europe opened higher, with the pan-continental Stoxx
Europe 600 index up 1.1% in midmorning trade, while the British
pound edged up 0.4% but remained near its lowest level in 20
months.
Lawmakers in the U.K.'s ruling Conservative party initiated a
no-confidence vote against Mrs. May. On Monday, she postponed a
parliamentary vote on her Brexit bill, which prompted a new volley
of criticism over her handling of the country's exit from the
European Union. The yield on U.K. 10-year government bonds was at
1.20%, up from 1.18% late Tuesday. Yields rise as prices fall.
Global stocks remained broadly upbeat, with U.S. futures putting
the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average on course to
rise 0.8% at the open.
Rises in European stocks echoed gains in Asia, where the Nikkei
climbed 2.2% and Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index rose 1.6% as signs of
a further softening in trade tensions revived risk appetite.
Benchmarks in Taiwan, South Korea and Singapore all increased more
than 1%.
Brent crude oil prices also climbed, rising 1.9% at $61.35 a
barrel, after weekly American Petroleum Institute figures released
Tuesday revealed a larger-than-expected fall in U.S.
inventories.
Details continued to emerge from the first trade talks between
Washington and Beijing, with China agreeing to boost purchases of
soybeans and other crops, and to reduce auto tariffs. Autos stocks
-- along with other trade-sensitive sectors like basic resources --
led gains Wednesday for the Stoxx Europe 600, with the basket
rising 1.9%.
The warming U.S.-China trade relations prompted cautious
optimism among some investors, said Viktor Hjort, global head of
credit strategy at BNP Paribas.
"A resolution on global trade is one of the most important
issues for markets going into 2019," Mr. Hjort said. "The positive
angle is that U.S. and Chinese negotiators appear to be making an
effort, but I think at this point, any absence of bad news is good
news."
President Trump said in an interview with Reuters he would
intervene in the Justice Department's case against Huawei Chief
Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou if it would help smooth a trade deal
with China. Ms. Wanzhou was granted bail by a Canadian judge
Tuesday, after her arrest last week sent shock-waves through global
stocks.
The Chinese yuan was last up 0.2% against the U.S. dollar. The
WSJ Dollar Index, which measures the buck against a basket of other
currencies, was down 0.1%, its five-day gains eroded to 0.5%.
U.S. investors were also keeping an eye out for inflation data,
due out later in the day. It comes a day after producer price data,
another gauge of inflation, signaled a third straight monthly rise.
The numbers will be scrutinized in the context of next week's
Federal Reserve meeting, at which investors broadly expect Chairman
Jerome Powell to raise interest rates.
CME Group data gave a 78.4% probability that Mr. Powell will
announce an interest-rate increase.
Market participants will closely monitor the no-confidence vote
on U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May's leadership later Wednesday,
although British assets' initial reaction to the announcement was
muted. The U.K.'s FTSE 100 index was last up 1.1%, broadly in line
with gains elsewhere in Europe, while the FTSE 250 was up 0.8%.
More volatility may be ahead for U.K. assets, though, with
analysts seeing the confidence vote as a binary event for sterling,
according to Jordan Rochester, foreign exchange strategist at
Nomura. A victory for Mrs. May could prompt a rally as large as 2%
for the pound, while defeat would shave off another 3%.
"The assumption from markets is that her replacement would be a
harder Brexit type," Mr. Rochester said in a note.
Elsewhere in Europe, investors monitored the reaction to French
President Emmanuel Macron's decision to cut taxes in the wake of
protests. The move may test the EU's budgetary rules and embolden
other members, such as Italy, to do the same.
In commodities, gold was up 0.2% at $1,249.20 a troy ounce.
Write to David Hodari at David.Hodari@dowjones.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
December 12, 2018 05:46 ET (10:46 GMT)
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