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/2023.01.03
/Dollar posts big gains, U.S. stocks buck global rally.txt
*Global shares edge up, but Wall Street drops*Correlation with dollar softens*Yen takes a breather from recent rallyLONDON/NEW YORK, Jan 3 (Reuters) - The dollar jumped on | |
Tuesday as oil prices sank, while U.S. stocks bucked a global | |
equities rally in a macro-packed week that could offer a steer | |
on when and where U.S. interest rates might peak.The MSCI All-World index fell 0.5%, dragged | |
by losses in U.S. stocks. The Dow Jones Industrial Average | |
lost 0.64%, the S&P 500 dropped 0.9%, and the | |
Nasdaq Composite lost 1.3%.Losses in U.S. stocks were led by a 14.7% tumble in | |
electric-vehicle maker Tesla after it missed Wall | |
Street estimates for quarterly deliveries. iPhone maker Apple | |
Inc dropped 4.3% to its lowest since June 2021 | |
following a rating downgrade due to production cuts in China.The U.S. dollar firmed ahead of Wednesday's | |
release of the minutes from the Federal Reserve's last meeting, | |
with expectations they will signal more policy tightening is in | |
store.A higher dollar walloped oil prices, which also took a | |
beating from concerns about slowing global economic growth, | |
especially after data showedChina's factory activity shrank in December."We expect the December FOMC minutes to shed additional | |
light on Fed officials' policy views for 2023. Note that at the | |
meeting, the Committee signalled broad expectations for a | |
substantially higher terminal rate this year," analysts at TD | |
Securities said in a note.The dollar index jumped 0.97% to 104.66.The euro was the worst-performing currency against the | |
dollar, falling by the most since late September, | |
after German regional inflation data showed consumer price | |
pressures eased sharply in December, thanks in large part to | |
government measures to contain natural gas bills for households | |
and businesses.Data on U.S. payrolls this week is expected to show the | |
labour market remains tight, while EU consumer prices could show | |
some slowdown in inflation as energy prices ease."Energy base effects will bring about a sizeable reduction | |
in inflation in the major economies in 2023, but stickiness in | |
core components, much of this stemming from tight labour | |
markets, will prevent an early dovish policy 'pivot' by central | |
banks," analysts at NatWest Markets wrote in a note.They expect interest rates to top out at 5% in the United | |
States, 2.25% in the EU and 4.5% in Britain and to stay there | |
for the entire year. Markets, on the other hand, are pricing in | |
rate cuts for late 2023, with fed fund futures implying | |
a range of 4.25% to 4.5% by December."The thing that makes me nervous about this year is that we | |
still do not know the full impact of the very significant | |
monetary tightening that's taken place across the advanced | |
world," Berenberg Senior Economist Kallum Pickering said."It takes a good year, or 18 months, for the full effect to | |
kick in," he said.Central banks have expressed concern about rising wages, | |
even as consumers have struggled to keep up with the soaring | |
cost of living and companies are running out of room to protect | |
their profitability by raising their own prices.But, Pickering said, the labour market tends to lag the | |
broader economy by some time, meaning that there is a risk that | |
central banks could be raising interest rates by more than the | |
economy can withstand."What central banks are inducing is essentially excess | |
cyclicality, which is - they overstimulated in 2021 and | |
triggered an inflationary boom and then overtightened in 2022 | |
and triggered a disinflationary recession. It’s exactly the | |
opposite of what you want central banks to do," he said.EUROPEAN SHARES RALLYOn the markets, European shares rose thanks to gains in | |
classic defensive sectors, such as healthcare and food and | |
beverages. Drugmakers Novo Nordisk, Astrazeneca | |
and Roche were among the biggest positive | |
weights on the STOXX 600, along with NestleThe STOXX, which lost 13% in 2022, rose 1.2%. The FTSE 100 | |
, the only major European index not to trade on Monday, | |
rose 1.4%.Markets have for a while priced in an eventual U.S. easing, | |
but they were badly wrong-footed by the Bank of Japan's shock | |
upward shift in its ceiling for bond yields.The BOJ is now considering raising its inflation forecasts | |
in January to show price growth close to its 2% target in fiscal | |
2023 and 2024, according to the Nikkei.Such a move at its next policy meeting on Jan. 17-18 would | |
only add to speculation of an end to ultra-loose policy, which | |
has essentially acted as a floor for bond yields globally.The policy shift has boosted the yen across the board, with | |
the dollar losing 5% in December and the euro 2.3%.The yen took a breather on Tuesday, easing 0.4% against the | |
dollar to 130.69. The dollar earlier touched a six-month low of | |
129.52 yen.Oil succumbed to the strength of the dollar, and concern | |
about demand in China, the world's second-largest economy, added | |
to the downward momentum.A batch of surveys has shown China's factory activity shrank | |
at the sharpest pace in nearly three years as COVID infections | |
swept through production lines."China is entering the most dangerous weeks of the | |
pandemic," warned analysts at Capital Economics.Brent crude lost 3% to trade around $83.32 a barrel.(Reporting by Wayne Cole; Editing by Bradley Perrett, Sam | |
Holmes, Chizu Nomiyama and Andrea Ricci) |