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World stocks advance as trade war worries ease

Reuters  |  LONDON 

By Kit Rees

LONDON (Reuters) - World stocks edged higher on Thursday as investors responded to signs of an easing of Sino-U.S. trade tensions by dipping back into riskier assets.

The equity index, which tracks shares in 47 countries, climbed 0.5 percent, while shares in jumped 6 percent to a two-week high.

Cyclical sectors including basic resources, autos and banks, hit particularly hard over the past two sessions in Europe, led gains.

Sentiment was lifted as expressed a willingness to negotiate, after proposed U.S. tariffs on $50 billion of Chinese goods prompted swift retaliation from

U.S. mini futures rose 0.4 percent, leaving Wall Street poised to build on Wednesday's rebound.

The dollar also drew support, hitting a two-week high of 90.34 against a basket of major currencies and rising against the safe-haven yen to 107.03 yen.

The euro held steady at $2276.

Proposed 25 percent U.S. tariffs on some 1,300 industrial technology, transport and medical products from will be subject to a public comment and consultation period that is expected to last around two months.

"I think that the substance of trade restrictions and their real impact will be far less than the headlines," said Jeffery Becker, at in

"U.S. and Chinese cross-border trade has grown significantly over the last decade and economic inter-dependence runs very deep, deeper than the actual trade numbers."

Asian stocks also benefited, with MSCI's broadest index of shares outside up 0.6 percent, a day after it hit its lowest in almost two months.

Japan's Nikkei ended 5 percent higher. Markets in mainland China, Hong Kong and were closed for the holiday on Thursday.

Many suspect will likely back down on some fronts after threatened tariffs on soybeans, the top U.S. agricultural export to

That is considered one of the most powerful weapons in Beijing's trade arsenal given the potential impact on and other farming states that backed in the

U.S. soybeans and corn regained ground on Thursday, following losses of around 2 percent the previous day.

NOT SO RISKY?

Some observers argue that the global is currently running so well that it could cope with the impact of the proposed tariffs, which cover a fraction of world trade.

"We've had a few months now where markets have really been going sideways and progressively lower, but at the same time has data really rolled over? The answer is no," Geoffrey Yu, at UBS Wealth Management, said.

"The underlying is actually chugging along which will increase the scope for upside surprises on the corporate front, on the economic front and at some point markets will have to catch up to that."

U.S. data on Wednesday underscored the prevailing bullish view on the Private payrolls increased solidly in March as hiring rose across the board, boding well for Friday's jobs data.

A correction since January has driven share price valuations down from record levels, attracting bargain hunters.

MSCI ACWI traded at 14.77 times its forward earnings, the lowest in more than two years.

bounced back in tandem with global share prices, and on a surprise draw in U.S. crude stockpiles. U.S. crude futures traded at $63.38 per barrel, flat in percentage terms.

Bond markets were hit by the recovery in equities as demand for safe-haven assets ebbed. The yield on the German 10-year touched a one-week high of 0.538 percent, while U.S. treasury yields were at 2.827 percent.

(Reporting by Kit Rees, Additional reporting by in Tokyo; editing by John Stonestreet)

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

First Published: Thu, April 05 2018. 15:49 IST
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