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Global Markets: ECB takes focus as trade war worries simmer

Reuters  |  LONDON 

By Marc Jones

LONDON (Reuters) - Relative calm returned to global markets on Thursday, as traders took a brief break from worrying about a global trade war and focused back on how fast the will end its 2.5 trillion stimulus programme.

Both European and Asian share markets edged higher -- the former for a fourth day -- after U.S. Donald Trump's push to introduce protectionist tariffs was tempered by signs he could spare some key trade partners.

Germany's Dax and the both lingered in the red though as a bigger-than-expected drop in German industrial orders reinforced zone caution after the weekend's inconclusive Italian election.

It may all argue for a more neutral message from ECB later. Markets are on high alert for any signal on when it will end more than three years of

"They have stretched out the (buying) cycle and that made sense to us," said Shoqat Bunglawala, for EMEA and Pacific at

"We would expect them to end purchases this year but we think they will still stay flexible if there is any change to the growth picture in "

Highlighting the strength of the global economy, Chinese data showed both exports and imports rose more than 20 percent in the first two months of this year from a year earlier.

In the market, the U.S. dollar stabilised against other major currencies after its recent hit from fears about the tariff plan while the Mexican peso and Canadian dollar recovered from their steep losses.

The traded flat at $1.2406, having risen to $1.2447 on Wednesday, its highest levels since Feb. 16. The has been rising since it hit a seven-week low of $1.21545 hit on Thursday, when Trump unveiled his tariff plan.

Bond markets were also broadly steady with U.S. Treasuries stuck at 2.88 percent and Germany's benchmark 10-year bond yield barely budged at 0.66 percent having hit a five-week low of 0.60 percent on Monday.

The ECB will publish new forecasts for its main target of zone inflation and for growth later, which will feed the debate on its end to stimulus.

TRADE OFF

In Asia, MSCI's broadest index of shares outside had risen 1.0 percent, while in the Nikkei gained 0.5 percent.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng led the region with rise of 1.4 percent after China's surprisingly strong trade data.

On Wall Street, the ended down just 0.05 percent at 2,726.8 after an initial loss of almost one percent, with tech shares being a major bright spot.

They erased most losses as told a media briefing that the impending hefty U.S. tariffs on and aluminium imports could exclude Canada, and a clutch of other countries.

That soothed worries about the prospect of more aggressive trade measures after the departure of Trump's top

Masahiro Ichikawa, at said the issue would continue to hang over markets however.

"Investors need to see exactly what steps Trump will take and what retaliatory actions other countries will take in coming days."

Trump was expected to sign a presidential proclamation to establish the tariffs during a ceremony on Thursday, but a said later it could slide into Friday because documents had to be cleared through a legal process.

said was preparing immediate counter-measures just in case of a major trade skirmish.

"If puts in place the measures this evening, we have a whole arsenal at our disposal with which to respond," Moscovici told on Thursday.

The dollar changed hands at 105.97 yen, little changed in Europe, keeping some distance from its 16-month low of 105.24 touched on Friday.

The Mexican peso last stood at 18.6900 per dollar, bouncing back from Wednesday's low of 18.90 while the Canadian dollar changed hands at C$1.2888 to the U.S. unit, off its eight-month low of C$1.3002 hit earlier this week.

Bitcoin steadied to after slumping more than 7 percent on Wednesday after U.S. and Japanese regulators tried to tighten their grip on cryptocurrencies.

Japan's financial regulator punished seven cryptocurrency exchanges, suspending at the two of them, in an effort to shore up consumer protection after the $530 million theft of digital money from Tokyo-based Coincheck.

In commodities, inched back after falling more than 2 percent the previous day on the back of record U.S. crude production and rising inventories.

U.S. Intermediate (WTI) crude futures were at $61.22 a barrel, down 0.1 percent, while benchmark Brent was 0.2 percent lower at $64.20 a barrel.

(Reporting by Marc Jones)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, March 08 2018. 15:50 IST
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