views
NEW YORK: Asian shares are set to end a tumultuous 2020 by hovering near record highs on Thursday while riskier currencies cruised near 2-1/2-year peaks, buoyed by hopes that COVID-19 vaccine rollouts will help the world beat the pandemic.
The upbeat mood, reflected in overnight gains on Wall Street, drubbed the “safe-haven” dollar and drove currencies such as the euro, sterling, the Australian dollar and the New Zealand dollar overnight to highs not seen in more than 2-1/2 years.
E-Mini S&P futures rose 0.11% to 3,728.5, while MSCI’s gauge of Asia-Pacific shares excluding Japan was little changed at 661.76, a hair’s breath from its record high of 661.80.
For the year, the MSCI index is up nearly 20%, outpacing a 15.5% gain in the U.S. S&P 500.
Australian shares lost 0.23% while the Japanese stock market is shut on Thursday.
Investors looking forward to a brighter 2021 will be eyeing China’s official manufacturing Purchasing Manager’s Index for December, due on Thursday at 0100 GMT.
Analysts expect the index to show China’s factory sector growing at a solid pace in December as the world’s second-largest economy steadily rebounds from the coronavirus crisis.
Still, some analysts warned that this year’s heady gains in global stock markets could mean a lot less room for further appreciation in 2021.
“We’d say 80% of all the baseline good news expected in 2021 is already incorporated,” analysts at DataTrek Research said in a note, adding that some “real surprises” would be needed next year for the U.S. stock market to rise another 10%.
For now, however, healthy risk appetites kept investors from the U.S. dollar.
The struggling dollar dropped 0.46% to 89.59 against a basket of currencies, plumbing a low not seen since April 2018.
A listless dollar helped the euro stand firm at a 32-month high of $1.2298. Sterling was also steady $1.3611, a level last seen in May 2018. The Australian dollar and New Zealand dollar also held their ground at their respective 32-month highs of $0.7665 and $0.7215.
A battered dollar also supported gold, with bullion prices up a touch at $1,894.225 an ounce.
Oil prices bucked the trend, however, retreating a shade as swelling year-over-year supply led some traders to view any economic recovery ahead to be gradual rather than swift.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude shed 0.02% to trade at $48.39, far below about $62 at the start of 2020.
Treasuries were little changed, with benchmark U.S. 10-year yields at 0.9264% and two-year yields at 0.1250%.
Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor
Read all the Latest News, Breaking News and Coronavirus News here
Comments
0 comment