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GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks, gold surge as Congress nears $2 trillion aid package

Published 24/03/2020, 22:07
© Reuters.
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* Stocks rally in biggest single-day bounce in month
* Major indexes post best gains since 2008 financial crisis
* Investors relieved as Fed pledge eases bond stress
* Factory surveys show extent of economic damage

By Herbert Lash, Sujata Rao and Marc Jones
NEW YORK/LONDON, March 24 (Reuters) - Stock markets soared
on Tuesday, with a gauge of global equities posting its biggest
gain since the coronavirus roiled financial markets a month ago,
as the U.S. Congress zoned in on a $2 trillion stimulus package
to curb the pandemic's economic toll.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said a deal was "very
close" for an aid package that investors hoped would turn around
markets reeling from the biggest downturn since the global
financial crisis more than a decade ago. The market rally came a day after the U.S. Federal Reserve's
offer of unlimited bond-buying to help avert a global depression
failed to persuade skittish investors, at least initially.
The mood improved on Tuesday, with U.S. gold futures GCv1
climbing as much as 6.7% to $1,672.60 an ounce and the dollar
halting its steady rise as the moves by the Fed and others eased
the need for cash and slashed the demand for dollars.
The rally led some to suggest a rout that has trimmed U.S.
and European equities by roughly 30% in the past month may be
near an end.
"We're seeing some signs that a bottoming is happening,"
said Neel Shah, senior trader at Peak6 Capital Management. "The
next big step is the Senate passing the stimulus bill."
U.S. and European stocks jumped 6% or more and the dollar
index, a basket of major trading currencies, slid.
MSCI's gauge of stocks across the globe .MIWD00000PUS
gained 8.39%, the largest single-day gain since equities tumbled
from all-time highs a month ago and since the height of the
global financial crisis in October 2008.


The broad pan-European STOXX 600 index .STOXX rose 8.40%,
its strongest session since late-2008. The index is still down
about 30% from a record peak hit in February.
German stocks .GDAXI jumped 11% and British blue chips
.FTSE added 9% as both bourses also posted their best sessions
since 2008.
Europe's so-called fear gauge .V2TX fell to 52.53, its
lowest in nearly two weeks, after spiking to 12-year highs
earlier this month.
Emerging market stocks rose 5.73%.
The rally was wide, lifting most stocks, with only 11 S&P
500 stocks declining on the day.
On Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average .DJI rose
2,112.98 points, or 11.37%, to 20,704.91. The S&P 500 .SPX
gained 209.93 points, or 9.38%, to 2,447.33 and the Nasdaq
Composite .IXIC added 557.18 points, or 8.12%, to 7,417.86.


Measures the Fed unveiled on Monday to boost liquidity
across debt markets and backstop lending were seen by investors
as helping market conditions.
"The Fed's measures are unprecedented, and they have been
extremely proactive in preventing this external shock from
morphing into a wider funding crisis," said Vasileios Gkionakis,
head of FX strategy at Lombard Odier.
The Fed also will expand its mandate to buy corporate and
municipal bonds and backstop a series of other measures that
analysts estimate will deliver more than $4 trillion in loans to
non-financial firms. Other countries unveiled their own measures. South Korea's
ravaged market climbed 8.6% .KS11 after the government doubled
a planned economic rescue package to 100 trillion won ($80
billion). In China, mainland stocks posted their biggest gain in three
weeks of almost 3% .CSI300 , while Japan's Nikkei .N225
soared 7%, its biggest daily gain in four years. .SS .T
Still, investors remained wary, as the number of coronavirus
infections globally neared 400,000 and new infections brought in
from abroad rose in China.
Business activity collapsed from Australia and Japan to
Western Europe at a record pace in March, as measures to contain
the outbreak hammered the world economy, and Japan said it was
postponing the Olympics.
IHS Markit's flash composite Purchasing Managers' Index
(PMI) for the euro zone, seen as a good gauge of economic
health, plummeted to a record low of 31.4 in March, the biggest
one-month fall since the survey began in 1998. The government and central bank financial support helped
calm nerves in bond markets, where yields on two-year U.S.
Treasuries hit their lowest since 2013.
The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note US10YT=RR fell
31/32 in price to yield 0.8642%.
Germany's 10-year yield was up 2 basis points on the day at
-0.36%, compared with a 4 bps rise before the purchasing
managers index (PMI) releases DE10YT=RR , all small moves when
compared to record lows hit at -0.90% earlier in March.


ALL ABOUT THE ECONOMY
The impact of the virus on the global economy is evident in
a series of growth forecast downgrades and advance readings of
PMIs across the world's biggest economies.
German activity plunged to the lowest since the 2009 crisis,
driven by a record services contraction, while French activity
hit all-time lows. Japan posted its biggest-ever services fall.
However, the prospect of massive Fed funding pushed the
greenback 0.26% lower against rivals, off three-year peaks
=USD , falling against the yen JPY= and sliding 1% versus the
euro EUR= .
Brent LCOc1 futures rose 12 cents to settle at $27.15 a
barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude CLc1
rose 65 cents to settle at $24.01.


<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
China's coronavirus cases https://tmsnrt.rs/2Qq4pxe
Volatility is back on Wall Street https://tmsnrt.rs/39JliL5
Global financial markets since coronavirus escalated https://reut.rs/39dPxbR
Global equities post biggest daily gain since a decade ago https://reut.rs/2UvW8ct
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