Global stocks rise as weak dollar, U.S. rate outlook keep oil strong

Reuters

Published Feb 04, 2016 04:37AM ET

Global stocks rise as weak dollar, U.S. rate outlook keep oil strong

By Nigel Stephenson

LONDON (Reuters) - Stocks advanced in Europe and Asia on Thursday, with the focus on energy companies as speculation U.S. interest rates may not rise at all this year left the dollar nursing hefty losses and oil held most of the previous day's big gains.

The dollar suffered, by some measures, its steepest one-day percentage drop other than in the financial crises of 1998 and 2008-09 on Wednesday after weak U.S. data and comments from a Fed policymaker interpreted as signalling further rate hikes could be delayed.

The U.S. currency fell 0.2 percent against a basket of its peers <.DOXY> on Thursday, and held close to Wednesday's 14-week low against the euro and its weakest for a week against the Japanese yen .

"The dollar is on its knees," said Richard Benson, head of portfolio management with currency fund Millennium in London. "Probably we will now have some stability ahead of U.S. payrolls tomorrow."

Dollar weakness, and unconfirmed talk that oil-producing countries in and outside the OPEC group may meet soon to discuss output cuts, helped crude prices add to Wednesday's sharp gains.

Brent, the global benchmark (LCOc1), dipped 5 cents to $34.99 a barrel, having fallen as low as $27.10 in mid-January.

Commodity-related shares pushed higher in early deals in Europe. The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index (FTEU3) rose 0.4 percent while the STOXX Europe 600 Basic Resources Index (SXPP) gained 3.4 percent and oil and gas index (SXEP) 2.2 percent.

Britain's miner-heavy FTSE 100 index (FTSE) rose 1.2 percent.

On the debit side, Swiss bank Credit Suisse (VX:CSGN) slid 9.6 percent after posting its first full-year loss since 2008.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan (MIAPJ0000PUS) jumped 2 percent. Australia's resource-rich index (AXJO) rose 2.1 percent.

Tokyo's Nikkei (N225) fell 0.9 percent, pressured by a stronger yen, which harms exporters, and by weak earnings forecasts from leading companies.

Chinese shares gained, with the CSI300 (CSI300) index closing 1.2 percent higher as the weaker dollar eased concerns of a sharp near-term depreciation in the yuan currency .

Stocks globally have had a rough start to 2016, hurt by tepid U.S. growth, falling oil prices, and concern the world faces a China-led slowdown.

But another potential worry -- that the U.S. Federal Reserve would keep raising interest rates throughout 2016 -- has receded somewhat.

Fed policymaker William Dudley told Market News International in an interview published on Wednesday that monetary conditions had tightened since the Fed raised rates on Dec. 3. and that rate-setters would have to take this into account.

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Investors interpreted this as meaning future rate rises might be delayed. The federal fund futures market FFZ6 indicates traders no longer expect a Fed hike this year.

The euro was up 0.2 percent at $1.1123, having firmed by about 2 percent on Wednesday. The yen gained about 0.1 percent to 117.80 per dollar.

Sterling rose 0.1 percent to $1.4610 as investors awaited a rate decision and economic forecasts from the Bank of England.

LOW-RISK

Stock market strength lessened the appeal of low-risk, low-reward government debt. Yields on German 10-year Bunds , the euro zone benchmark for borrowing costs, rose 1.4 basis points to 0.31 percent.

Ten-year U.S. Treasury yields (US10YT=RR) edged up 1 basis point to 1.89 percent.

"The pressure from oil is easing...and tranquillity is returning to other markets so we can expect a bit of a step back from bonds, and yields should trend higher," KBC strategist Piet Lammens said.