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GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks stutter at end of best week since June

Published 07/02/2020, 14:09
Updated 07/02/2020, 14:19
GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks stutter at end of best week since June
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* Coronavirus cases rise, Asian, European stocks slip

* World stocks still set for best week since June

* Major currencies steady, oil turns weak again

* U.S. Payrolls might be tricky to decipher this month

* World FX rates in 2020 http://tmsnrt.rs/2egbfVh

By Marc Jones

LONDON, Feb 7 (Reuters) - Nagging coronavirus worries took a

swipe at world markets on Friday but failed to stand in the way

of the best week for stocks since June and the strongest for the

dollar since August.

European trading pushed stocks down and safe-haven

government bonds up, a pattern set in Asia that traders seemed

happy to extend before monthly U.S. jobs data.

Investors wavered over the impact of the coronavirus. The

rate of new infections has slowed, although the extent of the

economic disruption due to curbs on travel and trade are not

completely clear. But the week till now has been one long rebound that lifted

MSCI's main world stocks index 3% .MIWD00000PUS , heading back

to the record highs reached at the start of the year.

Thanks to a $400 billion wipeout on Monday, Shanghai is

poised for its worst week in eight months. But other Asian

indexes are ahead and the pan-European FTSEurofirst .FTEU3 is

heading for its best week since late 2016.

"We are not that nervous, actually we are increasing our

risk allocation," said SEB investment management's global head

of asset allocation, Hans Peterson, adding that the risk of a

massive worldwide epidemic seemed to have dropped.

"We look more at this moment at the macro data in the U.S.

which is really very good ... and we presume we will get

substantial support from central banks like we did in China on

Monday."

Traders also had other areas to focus on. The euro fell to

its lowest since October in early European trading after German

industrial output recorded its biggest decline in a decade and

strong U.S. employment numbers had primed the dollar ahead U.S.

payrolls data.

In Asian trade, the yen halted a slide that has it set for

its worst week in 18 months, leaving the currency sitting just

above a two-week low at 109.89 per dollar. FRX/

TRAMPLED

The Australian dollar, often seen as a proxy for China,

weakened 0.5% to $0.6699 AUD=D3 after the Reserve Bank of

Australia slashed growth forecasts in its quarterly economic

outlook, blaming its bushfires and the coronavirus.

The Aussie was on track for its first weekly gain this year,

whereas the Singapore dollar SGD= and Thai baht THB= have

been trampled in a rush out of from emerging market. EMRG/FRX

Much is unknown about the coronavirus. The World Health

Organization has said it is too early to call a peak in the

outbreak. The death toll has doubled in less than a week to 638,

636 in China and two elsewhere. China's aggressive response, dubbed a "people's war for

epidemic prevention" by President Xi Jinping, has seen Beijing

pump billions of dollars into the money market to try and

stabilise confidence.

Yet, owing to much greater exposure to Chinese demand and

less access to the benefits of monetary stimulus, commodity

prices have been more sensitive to conditions on the ground.

Oil and metal prices fell hard when the coronavirus outbreak

gained pace and have been slow to recover.

Brent crude LCOc1 was weak again on Friday at $54.43 per

barrel, heading for its fifth back-to-back weekly drop. Oil

prices have fallen by 16% this year.

A rally in copper, often seen as a barometer of global

economic health because of its wide industrial use, had at

$5,695 per tonne, although it has seen its strongest week since

the start of December. MET/L

"We think that demand could come back strongly as opposed to

gradually in Q2 2020," said Commonwealth Bank commodities

analyst Vivek Dhar. "But the risk in the near term is that

(Chinese) provinces take longer to return to work in order to

contain the spread of the virus."

Stocks stabilize as pace of reported virus infections slows https://tmsnrt.rs/2tyLx6W

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