Stocks near six-month peak on China boost, oil gains

Reuters  |  NEW YORK 

By and Laila Kearney

The equity gains prompted investors to sell safe-haven assets ahead of the first leg of this week's $78 billion quarterly refunding, pushing Treasury yields higher.

The weakened against the on a more stable Chinese yuan after the pair neared but failed to break through technical levels supporting the single

U.S. corporate revenues are growing at a time the European and Japanese central banks continue to prop up their economies, which is suppressing shorter-term interest rates, said Michael Kelly, of multi-asset at

"Profits are incredible, actually, and it's not just tax-cut sugar highs," Kelly said.

Of the 428 companies in the that have released second-quarter earnings so far, 79 percent reported above expectations, a beat rate that if it holds will be the highest since started reporting the figure in 1994.

MSCI's all-country world index of stock markets in 47 countries <.MIWD00000PUS> gained 0.51 percent, while the pan-European index <.FTEU3> of leading regional shares rose 0.54 percent.

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average <.DJI> rose 148.45 points, or 0.58 percent, to 25,650.63. The <.SPX> gained 10.08 points, or 0.35 percent, to 2,860.48 and the <.IXIC> added 23.78 points, or 0.3 percent, to 7,883.46.

Powered by gains in and strong second-quarter U.S. earnings, the benchmark was about half a percentage point from its record peak in January.

shares jumped more than 7 percent after said on he is considering taking the private at $420 per share.

The shares traded as high as $371.15 before easing a bit.

Such a deal, at about $72 billion, would take Tesla out of the glare of Wall Street but might limit its access to capital.

Chinese stocks rebounded overnight on hopes of fresh government spending, following a four-day selloff that had knocked them down about 6 percent. [.SS]

China's central on Friday raised the cost of shorting the yuan, which stabilized the and helped boost the against the

The index <.DXY> fell 0.14 percent, with the up 0.32 percent to $1.159. The Japanese yen weakened 0.01 percent versus the greenback at 111.44 per dollar.

Turkey's lira recovered as much as 2 percent from Monday's losses of more than 5 percent after moved to end duty-free access to U.S. markets for some Turkish exports.

Benchmark 10-year notes fell 10/32 in price to yield 2.973 percent, up from 2.938 percent late on Monday.

Crude prices climbed as the revived sanctions against U.S. crude rose 16 cents to settle at $69.17 a barrel and Brent gained 90 cents to settle at $74.65.

The first round of U.S. sanctions target Iran's dollar purchases, metals trading, coal, and its auto sector.

(Additional reporting by Marc Jones, and in London, Amy Caren Daniel, Richard Leong in New York; Editing by Meredith Mazzilli)

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

First Published: Wed, August 08 2018. 01:13 IST