Stock markets steadied while the dollar recovered some ground on Tuesday after unease over how the U. S. policy slate will develop under Donald Trump’s presidency drove the currency to its weakest since early December.
Traders in Asia said shares were helped by hopes that the concerns about a stronger dollar expressed by the U.S. President-elect at the weekend, would be beneficial to emerging markets where companies have borrowed heavily in dollars.
In Asia, MSCI’s ex-Japan Asia-Pacific shares index .MIAPJ0000PUS rose 0.3 percent, just shy of a three-month high hit last Thursday. Energy and cyclical stocks were the chief gainers.
Short-covering also helped, especially in China .SSEC, where stocks tumbled more than 4 percent last week as traders took some money off the table before Trump’s inauguration on Friday.
European stock markets .FTEU3 were broadly steady after a choppy start, banking shares under pressure as investors chewed over details of the impact of regulatory fines on Deutsche Bank. (DBKGn.DE)
“You’ve seen the banks ease, everything has taken a breather after the strong start in January for stocks,” said Andy Sullivan, a portfolio manager with GL Asset Management UK in London.
“The last few days have been choppier and for the rally to be sustained, we need to see earnings growth start to come through.”
MSCI’s broadest index of global share prices .MIWD00000PUS reached its highest since mid-2015 on Friday and, driven by a bounce in expectations for U.S. inflation and growth since Trump’s election, is within sight of all-time highs.
But worries about the new U.S. president’s attitude to trade and politics, with relations with China in focus, have begun to show up more in some asset prices since the start of the year.
The dollar fell almost 1 percent on Tuesday and is on course for its worst two weeks since the election after Trump expressed concern about the dollar’s strength in the context of trade relations with China. .DXY
It recovered around 0.3 percent on Wednesday with eyes on a speech by the head of the Federal Reserve and U.S. inflation data for clues on the path of interest rates.
Sterling, which soared more than 3 percent on Tuesday after Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit speech, fell back 0.7 percent.
“Everything is just a partial reversal of the price action yesterday,” said RBC Capital Markets currency strategist Adam Cole, arguing that the greenback’s weakness had been primarily driven by excessive positioning at the end of last year.
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