
By Jamie McGeever
ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) – TRADING DAY
Making sense of the forces driving global markets
Global equity markets on Monday kept up the positive momentum initiated by Friday’s rebound, as investors parked their concerns over escalating global trade tensions and hoovered up cheap and beaten down stocks.
Many short-term positioning and momentum indicators suggest Wall Street was oversold, so in that light a continuation of the recovery is understandable. Chances for a truce in the Ukraine-Russia war, slender as they may be, are also lending some support to risky assets at the margins.
But there are plenty of reasons to be wary of chasing this bounce too aggressively – Monday saw the release of yet another surprisingly weak U.S. retail sales report, and the White House confirmed President Donald Trump’s previous pledge that reciprocal tariffs will come into effect on April 2.
Today’s Key Market Moves.
* The MSCI All-Country World Index rises for a second day,its first back-to-back gains in a month. Benchmark European andAsian indices rise 1% or more. * Wall Street’s three main indices rise between 0.3% and0.9% as investors continue to ‘buy the dip’. This pulls the S&P500 further away from its recent ‘correction’. * All but one of the S&P 500’s 10 sectors rise, and that isconsumer cyclicals. A rise in crude oil futures helped liftenergy stocks 1.6%, after the U.S. vowed to keep attackingYemen’s Houthis until the group ends assaults on shipping. * 40-year Japanese Government Bond yields hit a new high of2.95%, rising for the 13th day out of the last 14, andsteepening the JGB curve. * Gold rises 0.5% on the day to keep a grip on the $3,000and ounce mark, supported by weak U.S. economic data and fallingdollar. * Rising stocks and a lower dollar and Treasury yields meanU.S. financial conditions loosen for a second day, furtherlowering Goldman Sachs’s financial conditions index fromThursday’s 10-month high.
But impressive as the global rebound has been over the last two trading days – more than 3% in both the S&P 500 and MSCI World Index – it’s a brave person to call this a definitive turn.
There’s simply too much uncertainty and too little visibility around Trump’s trade war for that. And the U.S. economic data continues to soften – Citi’s U.S. economic surprises index has been in negative territory since February 20 and is languishing near its lowest level since September.
The outlook for other major economies, notably China and Europe, is brighter.