Global stocks touch record high, dollar fall deepens

After Fed rate hike, investors were keen on a meeting of global finance chiefs in Germany

Reuters  |  New York 

Photo: Reuters
Photo: Reuters

A index touched a fresh record high on Friday, wrapping up a week when many of the world's major central banks either raised or signalled they might do so, underlining confidence about economic growth and

The slipped, continuing its slide in the wake of the Federal Reserve's decision on Wednesday to boost but maintain a gradual pace of hikes this year.

Investors were also watching a meeting of global finance chiefs in Germany beginning on Friday. The world's financial leaders will renounce competitive devaluations and warn against exchange rate volatility, a document showed.

MSCI's all-country world stock index was little changed after touching an all-time high earlier in the day.

The raised rates for the second time in three months on Wednesday and China hiked rates on Thursday, while and a policymaker hinted at higher rates.

"It looks like the rest of the central banks may be thinking about tightening up a little bit," said Bucky Hellwig, senior vice president at BB&T Wealth Management in Birmingham, Alabama.

"It confirms that growth is improving both domestically and globally, which is what everyone has been looking for ... They wouldn't be doing that if their economies still needed aggressive monetary stimulus."

On Wall Street, the benchmark ended slightly lower, as bank shares fell alongside Treasury yields.

The Industrial Average fell 19.93 points, or 0.1 percent, to 20,914.62, the lost 3.13 points, or 0.13 per cent, to 2,378.25 and the Composite added 0.24 points to 5,901.00.

The pan-European index gained 0.2 per cent. European bank stocks touched their highest point in more than a year after an policymaker kindled talk of a possible rate hike.

The ECB will decide later whether to raise before or after ending its bond purchase program, policymaker Ewald Nowotny told a newspaper.

"I think Nowotny and a lot of the regulators and central bankers realise that negative have been a disaster for the economy and they're going to get more positive," said David Hussey, head of European equities at Manulife Asset Management in London.

The edged 0.04 per cent lower to a fresh five-week low against a basket of currencies. The greenback remained under pressure for a third straight session after the quashed hopes for a further bull run in the currency by keeping a gradual pace to its monetary tightening policy.

"At the moment, the remains in correction mode," said Fawad Razaqzada, market analyst at Forex.com in London.

Data on Friday showed a steadily improving US economy, with manufacturing output rising for a sixth straight month in February and preliminary consumer confidence for the month of March increasing as well.

US Treasury yields edged lower after data showing low in March suggested the could aim for a slower pace of rate hikes this year than it had forecast on Wednesday.

Prices for benchmark 10-year gained 7/32 to yield 2.499 per cent, from 2.524 per cent late on Thursday.

Oil prices were steady and posted modest gain weekly gains after losing almost 10 per cent last week.

settled up 2 cents at $51.76 a barrel. US light crude settled up 3 cents at $48.78.

Global stocks touch record high, dollar fall deepens

After Fed rate hike, investors were keen on a meeting of global finance chiefs in Germany

After Fed rate hike, investors were keen on a meeting of global finance chiefs in Germany

A index touched a fresh record high on Friday, wrapping up a week when many of the world's major central banks either raised or signalled they might do so, underlining confidence about economic growth and

The slipped, continuing its slide in the wake of the Federal Reserve's decision on Wednesday to boost but maintain a gradual pace of hikes this year.

Investors were also watching a meeting of global finance chiefs in Germany beginning on Friday. The world's financial leaders will renounce competitive devaluations and warn against exchange rate volatility, a document showed.

MSCI's all-country world stock index was little changed after touching an all-time high earlier in the day.

The raised rates for the second time in three months on Wednesday and China hiked rates on Thursday, while and a policymaker hinted at higher rates.

"It looks like the rest of the central banks may be thinking about tightening up a little bit," said Bucky Hellwig, senior vice president at BB&T Wealth Management in Birmingham, Alabama.

"It confirms that growth is improving both domestically and globally, which is what everyone has been looking for ... They wouldn't be doing that if their economies still needed aggressive monetary stimulus."

On Wall Street, the benchmark ended slightly lower, as bank shares fell alongside Treasury yields.

The Industrial Average fell 19.93 points, or 0.1 percent, to 20,914.62, the lost 3.13 points, or 0.13 per cent, to 2,378.25 and the Composite added 0.24 points to 5,901.00.

The pan-European index gained 0.2 per cent. European bank stocks touched their highest point in more than a year after an policymaker kindled talk of a possible rate hike.

The ECB will decide later whether to raise before or after ending its bond purchase program, policymaker Ewald Nowotny told a newspaper.

"I think Nowotny and a lot of the regulators and central bankers realise that negative have been a disaster for the economy and they're going to get more positive," said David Hussey, head of European equities at Manulife Asset Management in London.

The edged 0.04 per cent lower to a fresh five-week low against a basket of currencies. The greenback remained under pressure for a third straight session after the quashed hopes for a further bull run in the currency by keeping a gradual pace to its monetary tightening policy.

"At the moment, the remains in correction mode," said Fawad Razaqzada, market analyst at Forex.com in London.

Data on Friday showed a steadily improving US economy, with manufacturing output rising for a sixth straight month in February and preliminary consumer confidence for the month of March increasing as well.

US Treasury yields edged lower after data showing low in March suggested the could aim for a slower pace of rate hikes this year than it had forecast on Wednesday.

Prices for benchmark 10-year gained 7/32 to yield 2.499 per cent, from 2.524 per cent late on Thursday.

Oil prices were steady and posted modest gain weekly gains after losing almost 10 per cent last week.

settled up 2 cents at $51.76 a barrel. US light crude settled up 3 cents at $48.78.

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