European stocks boosted by rate-hike outlook; dollar slips

 

Bloomberg

European stocks gained and the dollar fell after Federal Reserve meeting minutes showed support for more moderate interest rate increases.
The Stoxx Europe 600 Index extended its recent rally as the real estate sector outperformed, boosted by the prospects of slower rate hikes and analyst upgrades. Dr. Martens Plc shares plunged the most on record after the bootmaker’s sales and earnings missed expectations.
Trading volumes are expected to be lower due to the Thanksgiving holiday, which will mean no cash US equity market trading. Wall Street futures were up after the S&P 500 closed at a two-month high. Asia’s equities benchmark climbed.
Minutes from the Fed gathering earlier this month indicated several officials backed the need to moderate the pace of rate hikes, even as some underscored the need for a higher terminal rate. This adds weight to expectations the central bank will raise rates by 50 basis points next month, ending a run of jumbo 75 basis point increases.
“It was the start of a more different and dovish narrative from the Fed,” said Sunaina Sinha Haldea, global head of private capital advisory at Raymond James. “Is it a pivot? No, but are we seeing a slowdown in rate hikes and that path downwards towards rate cuts coming through? Yes. I think we will look back and say this was the peak of it.”
Data also showed US business activity contracted and unemployment applications rise as the economy cools.
A gauge of dollar strength falls further on Thursday, taking declines into a third day. There is no trading in Treasuries due to the US holiday.
Oil slipped as the European Union considered a higher-than-expected price cap on Russian crude and signs of a global slowdown increased.
Meanwhile, Bank of America Corp. said its private clients are flocking to bonds and out of stocks amid fears of a looming recession. Bond funds attracted inflows for a 39th straight week, strategists led by Michael Hartnett wrote in a note. The strategists favor holding bonds in the first half of 2023, with stocks becoming more attractive in the last six months of next year.
“We stay bearish risk assets in the first half, set to turn bullish in the second half as narrative shifts from inflation and rate ‘shocks’ of 2022 to recession and credit ‘shocks’ in the first half 2023,” the strategists wrote.
Gold rises for a third day on the Fed minutes. The precious metal has been hurt by the US central bank’s aggressive monetary-tightening policy to curb inflation, which has pushed up bond yields and the dollar and in turn sent bullion tumbling about 16% from its March peak.
In Asian trading, mainland Chinese stocks underperformed as investors weighed the impact of record Covid-19 cases against signs of loosening monetary conditions. Official comments indicated the People’s Bank of China would allow banks to reduce capital reserves to stimulate growth.
The Stoxx Europe 600 rises 0.5% as of 10:34 am London time and futures on the Nasdaq 100 also gain 0.5%.
While futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average jump 0.2%, the MSCI Asia Pacific Index also climbs 1.6%.
and the MSCI Emerging Markets Index also climbs 1.2%.
The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index fell 0.2% and the euro was little changed at $1.0398.
While the Japanese yen rose 0.9% to 138.34 per dollar, the offshore yuan was little changed at 7.1535 per dollar. The British pound rose 0.4% to $1.2098.

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