"Overview: Risk appetite grows on hope for US
By Dave Shellock
Published: March 26 2009 18:52 | Last updated: March 26 2009 18:52
Risk appetite showed further signs of improvement on Thursday as hopes that the US economy was close to bottoming helped equities extend their winning run, credit spreads narrow and oil reach a four-month high.
Furthermore, high-yielding currencies staged a broad advance, with the Japanese yen one of the day’s big decliners.
“The theme remains that economic figures are not as bad as feared, which reduces a major source of pressure on investor risk sentiment,” said Lena Komileva, head of G7 market economics at Tullett Prebon.
“Such is human nature that a slower pace of global demand weakness and production capacity destruction is seen as a reason to rally.”
Indeed, US equities advanced in spite of data showing that the economy shrank at its fastest pace since 1982 in the fourth quarter and that continued claims for jobless benefit hit a record 5.56m this month.
By midday in New York, the S&P 500 was up 1 per cent, helped by a batch of positive results from the consumer sector.
European momentum slowed after five straight days of gains, although the FTSE Eurofirst 300 index still managed to edge up 0.2 per cent while the FTSE 100 in London rose 0.6 per cent.
Asian markets moved higher across the board, with the Nikkei 225 in Tokyo climbing 1.8 per cent to a fresh 2½-month high and Hong Kong jumping 3.6 per cent.
Stephen Lewis, economist at Monument Securities, said equities might well retain their relative strength until the next quarterly reporting season opens next month.
However, he cautioned: “Companies’ inability then to provide visibility on earnings is likely to dispel the notion that an economic upturn is in view.”
European credit indices tightened in early trade, although by the close the investment-grade Markit iTraxx Europe index was down just 0.5 basis points at 160.5bp. The Markit CDX North America index shed 3bp to 179bp, its fourth daily decline.
In the currency markets, the New Zealand and Australian dollars were notable gainers as the improving risk environment dented the yen and the Swiss franc.
Hefty outflows of funds from Japan highlighted the country’s poor economic situation.
“The macro backdrop in Japan is dismal, causing Japan to be one of the most challenged economies we cover,” said Fiona Lake at Goldman Sachs.
“Fair value for dollar/yen is Y114, causing the yen to be one of the most overvalued currencies we cover.”
The dollar inched higher to Y98.58 even as the potential implications from China’s call for a new global currency as an alternative to the greenback reverberated around the markets.
Sterling weakened after retail sales figures triggered fresh concerns about the UK economic outlook.
Sales fell by a bigger than forecast 1.9 per cent in February.
James Knightley, economist at ING, warned that further sharp declines were likely.
“Unemployment is surging, nominal wages are now falling and wealth is plunging while confidence is at all-time lows.
“Consequently the Bank of England could yet have to further expand its monetary easing through increased purchases of government and corporate bonds.”
There was some relief for the UK government bond market after a sale of £1.1bn of index-linked gilts was well covered. An auction of 40-year paper on Wednesday failed, triggering fears about the UK government’s ability to borrow.
The yield on the 10-year gilt on Thursday rose 2bp to 3.3 per cent, while German Bunds were little changed.
US government bonds moved higher after the demand at Thursday’s $24bn auction of seven-year notes improved after a tepid five-year sale on Wednesday.
The 10-year yield was down 4bp at 2.75 per cent. The yield on the one-month T-Bill briefly dipped into negative territory as investors sought liquid securities to bolster balance sheets at the end of the quarter.
In commodities, the US oil price briefly touched a four-month high above $54 a barrel before easing back slightly amid growing hopes that demand would pick up.
Copper pushed back above $4,000 a tonne as base metals staged a broad rally while gold climbed back to $940 an ounce."
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