Reuters
reports
World stocks were headed for
their fourth week of gains in five on Friday after a surge in oil prices helped
propel Wall Street's three main indexes to co-ordinated record highs for the
first time since 1999.
MSCI's 46-country 'All
World' index .MIWD00000PUS hovered at a one-year top as Europe's main bourses
ran out of momentum having briefly hit a post-Brexit vote high in opening
deals.
It followed Wall Street's
landmark close and 1 percent plus gains in Tokyo .N225 and China .CSI300
overnight after some disappointing data there bolstered expectations that
Beijing will be looking at its stimulus options again.
China's fixed asset
investment from January to July increased by 8.1 percent from a year earlier,
the slowest rate in more than 16 years and below expectations for 8.8 percent.
July retail sales rose 10.2
percent, versus 10.6 percent the previous month and a forecast 10.5 percent.
Industrial output slightly missed expectations as it came in at 6 percent,
while new bank lending was also slower than estimated.
"You have got the
triple highs in the U.S equity markets and that basically shows you that risk
appetite remains buoyant," said Societe Generale strategist Alvin Tan.
"The Chinese data
didn't have much of a market impact at all, and that speaks of a global macro
environment that is very pro risk."
Oil prices helped. They held
onto the 4 percent gains made on Thursday after a Saudi oil minister hinted at
possible joint action between producers to stabilize prices and the
International Energy Agency said it expected oversupply to start easing soon.
[O/R]
Global benchmark Brent crude
LCOc1 climbed 0.3 percent to $46.18, set to end the week 4.7 percent higher and
U.S. crude at $43.89 a barrel was on track for a 5 percent weekly rise.
"We are going to have a
ministerial meeting of IEF (International Energy Forum) in Algeria next month,
and there is an opportunity for OPEC and major exporting non-OPEC ministers to
meet and discuss the market situation, including any possible action that may
be required to stabilize the market," Saudi Energy Minister Khalid
al-Falih had said.
DATA DUMP
Back in Europe, there was
reassuring news from the bloc's largest economy Germany, where economic growth
slowed less than expected in the second quarter thanks to solid exports and
state and consumer spending.
Global markets will also
sift through a slew of U.S. data, notably retail sales, due later in the
session for latest cues about the world's largest economy and whether it is
robust enough to withstand further monetary tightening.
U.S. retail sales are
expected to show a 0.4 percent monthly increase in July, according to the
median estimate of 64 economists polled by Reuters. ECONUS
In currencies, the dollar
rose after San Francisco Federal Reserve President John Williams told the
Washington Post that the U.S. central bank should raise rates this year because
of improving labor market conditions and the likelihood that inflation is
heading higher.
The greenback was steady at
102.025 yen JPY= after gaining 0.7 percent on Thursday, and is heading for a
0.25 percent weekly rise. The euro was also flat at $1.11420 EUR= after losing
0.3 percent overnight.
The dollar index, which
tracks the greenback against a basket of six major peers, rose 0.06 percent to
95.913, but was on track for a loss of 0.3 percent for the week.
The New Zealand dollar
slipped 0.2 percent NZD=D4 after surging on Thursday to its highest in more
than a year after its central bank cut interest rates by 25 basis points to 2.0
percent.
The Australian dollar dipped
0.2 percent AUD=D4, sapped by the data from China, the big buyer of its
commodities, although it too was within touching distance of a year-high.
The rise in risk appetite
weighed slightly on safe-haven gold XAU=. The precious metal inched up 0.1
percent to $1,339.86 an ounce after losing 0.6 percent overnight.
Euro zone bond yields also
edged back from record lows as the rise in oil prices eased nagging deflation
concerns and follow Williams' Federal Reserve rate hike comments.
"Since we had that drop
to a record low in July, German bond yields have been pretty stable and oil
prices will have a role in where we go from here," RBC's chief European
macro strategist Peter Schaffrik said.
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