Stock markets usher in New Year with big gains


Global stock markets powered ahead yesterday as investors welcomed 2020 with a raft of gains after China’s central bank announced fresh stimulus, dealers said.
Asia kicked off the New Year on the front foot, with most rallying out of the blocks yesterday on lingering trade optimism and the stimulus news.
Europe also shone as investors remain upbeat about the global outlook after Washington and Beijing eventually reached a trade agreement to ease tensions between the two.
“There is an ongoing view from the market that 2020 may feel better than 2019 did,” said Will James, deputy head of European equities at Aberdeen Standard Investments. “There is more of a value bias to the market (given the) positive noise around trade.”
Lenders were on a tear, up 1.9% at their highest in nearly eight months, followed by the technology sector that was driven by gains in trade-sensitive chip stocks.
China-exposed mining and auto shares were also among the biggest gainers along with industrials which were lifted by a 2.3% jump in Airbus after it edged out Boeing to become the world’s biggest plane maker.
That lifted the wider French index 1.1%.
Bank-heavy Spanish and Italian indices gained the most in the region, up around 1.4% each, while German shares posted their best day in one month, shrugging off figures that showed the manufacturing sector contracted further in December.
Eurozone stocks jumped 1.2% yesterday despite latest data showing factory activity in the bloc contracting for the eleventh straight month.
London’s FTSE 100 closed 0.8% up at 7,604.30 points, Frankfurt’s DAX 30 ended 1.0% higher at 13,385.93 points and Paris’ CAC 40 finished with 1.1% gains at 6,041.50 points, while the EURO STOXX 50 closed adding 1.3% at 3,793.24 points yesterday. 
Wall Street joined the global trend, with all three major US indices solidly higher in the late New York morning.
Some Brexit uncertainty has, meanwhile, been removed with Britain set to leave the European Union on January 31, but the pound still slipped after news that Britain’s manufacturing activity slumped in December for the eighth month in a row.
“2019 was a good year on the whole for stock markets and they seem to be wasting little time in attempting to push higher again with the bourses following the lead of their Asian peers,” said XTB analyst David Cheetham.
“Expectations that a ‘Phase One’ trade deal between the US and China will be signed in less than two weeks have boosted sentiment but the main driving force appears to be the announcement of a further easing of monetary policy from China’s central bank.”
However, geopolitical worries resurfaced following a warning from North Korean leader Kim Jong-un that moratoriums on nuclear and intercontinental ballistic missile tests had ended, with talks with the US going nowhere.
Shanghai and Hong Kong led gains after the People’s Bank of China said it would lower the amount of cash lenders must keep in reserve, freeing up more than $100bn for loans to small businesses.
The move comes as leaders try to kickstart growth in the world’s number two economy, which is running at its weakest for almost three decades.
Prices also won support after Donald Trump said the mini China-US trade deal will be signed off in Washington on January 15, and he will later travel to Beijing for the next phase of talks.
The signing will smooth concerns that the pact could suffer a last-minute collapse, which has niggled some traders.
But some analysts warned that investors shouldn’t expect the stock market party to go on forever.
“There’s plenty of reason to be more optimistic heading into 2020 but then, there’s also plenty of reason for caution too,” said Craig Erlam, Senior Market Analyst at Oanda.
“Everything is not suddenly okay because the US and China are about to sign a phase one trade deal, or because the UK and EU are preparing to discuss the future relationship rather than the divorce.
It could be another turbulent year with many surprises along the way,” he said.
Missing out on the broader rally, Tullow Oil Plc shares fell 6.8% an on doubts over commercial viability of a reservoir in its newly struck oil well in offshore Guyana.

from Gulf Times https://ift.tt/2sIHBjz

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