Stocks bounce on stimulus hopes, Treasuries slide towards 1 per cent
World stocks markets regained a measure of calm on Monday as hopes for a raft of global interest rate cuts to soften the economic blow of the coronavirus steadied nerves and drove US Treasury yields close to 1 per cent.
After last week's worst plunge for equities markets since the depths of the 2008 financial crisis, it was always going to be a wild ride.
Asia had initially dived again after China reported a record slump in factory activity but the region rallied to finish higher as bond yields sunk and talk of OPEC supply cuts sent oil prices roaring up 3.5 per cent.
Europe then made a blistering start. The FTSEurofirst 300 jumped over 2 per cent, putting it on course for its best day in well over a year and Wall Street S&P 500 and Dow futures were pointing to similar gains too.
"The market is coming back because there is perception that there will be a coordinated G7 policy response," said BlueBay Asset Management's head of credit strategy David Riley.
"We have Fed and ECB meetings coming up in the next couple of weeks. The Fed is the key one and it will be very hard for them to hold off (from rate cuts) if we are in a situation where the economic downsides are becoming more prevalent."
The sheer scale of losses led financial markets to price in policy responses from the US Federal Reserve and European Central Bank to the Bank of Japan and the Reserve Bank of Australia. L4N2AU0ZB]
Futures now imply a full 50 basis point cut by the Fed at its March 17-18 meeting while Australian markets are pricing in a quarter-point cut at the RBA's Tuesday meeting.
On Monday, investors were encouraged by comments from Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda who said the central bank would take necessary steps to stabilise markets.
A spokesman for the Bank of England said it too was monitoring developments and assessing "potential impacts on the global and UK economies and financial systems".
Bets that the Fed will be first to cut pushed the dollar to a one-month low against the world's major currencies.
Individually, it was down at $1.1070 to the euro, flat on the yen at 108.08 yen and only made gains on the pound which wilted as what are likely to be fraught post-Brexit trade talks with the EU began in Brussels.
MSCI's broadest index of world shares rose 0.7 per cent, up for the first time in eight sessions and recovering from Asia's early dip, though the uptick barely offset its 10.4 per cent tumble last week. Shanghai had added 3.3 per cent.
The rapid spread of the coronavirus has led businesses globally to curb travel, send workers home and cancel events, hitting stocks in the aviation, gambling and tourism sectors.
The disruption to global supply chains and productivity has darkened the outlook for a world economy already struggling with the fallout of the US-China trade war.
"There's no policy out there, frankly, that is going to be sufficiently large to offset the nature of what's coming in terms of the virus. So we have to keep watching these new case numbers until these show signs of levelling off," said ING's Carnell.
Nevertheless the bond markets were giving their view loud and clear.
Benchmark US 10-Year Treasuries hit a fresh record low of 1.0300 per cent before shuffling back up to 1.1028 per cent in European trading where German Bunds were still -0.62 per cent.
Analysts said a sustained market recovery depended on the rate of new coronavirus infections slowing outside China.
The epidemic, which began in China, has killed roughly 3,000 people worldwide as authorities race to contain infections in Iran, Italy, South Korea and the United States.
Commodity markets were part of Monday's global rebound. Oil prices bounced $1.5 a barrel on hopes of a deeper cut in output by OPEC after earlier hitting multi-year lows.
Brent crude last traded at $51.3 per barrel and US crude at $46.2 per barrel, while industrial metals copper and nickel were 2 per cent and 3 per cent higher respectively and gold jumped 1.4 per cent too after a mild drop last week.
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