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GLOBAL MARKETS-World stocks hit record high, as sterling endures torrid week

Published 20/12/2019, 10:04
© Reuters.  GLOBAL MARKETS-World stocks hit record high, as sterling endures torrid week
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* MSCI world index up 0.1% to record high

* Washington says trade deal done, China reticent

* Sterling heads for worst week since late 2017

* Graphic: World FX rates in 2019 http://tmsnrt.rs/2egbfVh

(Changes dateline, byline, updates throughout)

By Tom Wilson and Swati Pandey

LONDON/SYDNEY, Dec 20 (Reuters) - World stocks touched

record highs on Friday, as trading wound down before the

year-end holidays, while the British pound was heading towards

its worst week for more than two years amid renewed worries over

how Britain will leave the European Union.

MSCI's world equity index .MIWD00000PUS , which tracks

shares in 49 countries, gained a smidgeon to 561.31, bettering a

record touched on Thursday as optimism infused markets after the

United States and China agreed an initial trade deal.

The MSCI index is on track to advance more than 1% this

week, in what would be its fourth straight week of gains.

European shares led the way, with the broad Euro STOXX 600

.STOXX gaining 0.3% in early trading. Indexes in Frankfurt

.GDAXI , Paris .FCHI and London .FTSE all made similar

gains.

However Shell RDSa.L shares fell 0.6% after it said it

expects impairment charges of up to $2.3 billion in the fourth

quarter and trimmed its forecast for quarterly oil

production sales. On Wall Street, e-mini futures for the S&P 500 ESc1

slipped a touch but were near all-time highs, having risen more

than 1% in the week.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan

.MIAPJ0000PUS were steady after rising 1.2% so far this week

and almost 5% this month.

Underscoring that the trade war issue has been put to bed

for now, U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said the United

States and China would sign their Phase One trade pact in early

January.

Mnuchin said the documentation was completely finished and

just undergoing a technical "scrub", though Beijing has so far

dodged all details of the deal. The U.S. House of Representatives also overwhelmingly

approved a new North American deal that leaves $1.2 trillion in

annual U.S.-Mexico-Canada tradeflows largely intact.

Market players were already beginning to look at what the

next steps for the Washington-Beijing saga will be in the new

year.

"The focus will be on what the outlook is on a more

comprehensive phase two deal - what the language is like, what

Trump and the Chinese are saying about it," said Neil Wilson,

chief markets analyst at Markets.com.

Wall Street investors had on Thursday pushed the S&P 500

.SPX to a sixth straight record, its longest such streak since

January 2018. All three major U.S. indexes - S&P 500, Nasdaq and

Dow - notched record closing highs. .N

Still, some data reminded investors of the fragile state of

the world economy.

The mood among German consumers deteriorated unexpectedly

heading into January, a survey showed, suggesting that household

spending in Europe's largest economy could weaken at the

beginning of next year. IN PERIL

On the currency front, sterling steadied after suffering a

harsh reversal that left it facing its worst weekly fall since

late 2017 at 2.4%.

Former Bank of England deputy governor Andrew Bailey will be

the central bank's next governor, Britain's finance minister

said. Bailey will serve an eight-year term, with investors

expecting continuity on monetary policy. The pound was up 0.2% at $1.3025 GBP=D3 having slipped

overnight to below $1.30, a dramatic drop from a $1.3514 peak

when British Prime Minister Boris Johnson used his sweeping

election victory to revive the risk of a hard Brexit.

"We see the biggest risks being to GBP/USD depreciation over

the next two weeks as Brexit preparations take place amidst the

most sluggish UK economy in 10 years," said Richard Grace, chief

currency strategist at CBA.

The British parliament will vote at around 1430 GMT on

Johnson's Brexit deal. Against a basket of currencies, the dollar edged up 0.04%

for the week to 97.406 .DXY , thanks mainly to the steep drop

in sterling.

Asia stock markets https://tmsnrt.rs/2zpUAr4

Asia-Pacific valuations https://tmsnrt.rs/2Dr2BQA

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