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Abstract: Stocks and bonds were both headed for their first weekly gain in a month on Friday as investors wagered on central banks bringing inflation to heel, though growth fears dragged on commodities.
Global stocks and benchmark U.S. bonds headed for their first weekly gain in a month on Friday, with economic growth worries tempered by a view that sliding copper and other commodity prices could brake runaway inflation.
The week has been marked by steep declines for commodities on concern that the world economy is looking shaky and that interest rate hikes will hurt growth – which in turn is prompting traders to cut inflation expectations and pare back some bets on the size of the hikes.
“Inflation will remain elevated and above target but its increasingly likely it will start to peak over the next few months,” said Andrew Hardy, investment manager at Momentum Global Investment Management.
“Markets could take that reasonably well – theres potential for recovery later in the year.”
Copper, a bellwether for economic output with its wide range of industrial and construction uses, is heading for its steepest weekly drop since March 2020. It fell in London and Shanghai on Friday and is down more than 7% on the week.
Tin dropped 9.7% to $24,380 a tonne, its lowest since March 2021 and on track for a weekly percentage fall of nearly 22%, its biggest on record.
Brent crude futures are down over 3% on the week to $109.70 a barrel and off 10% for the month, while benchmark grain prices sank, with Chicago wheat off more than 8% for the week. [O/R][GRA/]
Gold was up 0.29% at $1,828.50 per ounce but was heading for a second straight weekly fall.
The drops have offered some relief to equities since energy and food have been the drivers of inflation. After heavy recent losses, MSCIs World equities index was up 0.3% on the day and 2.4% this week, setting it up for the first weekly gain since May.
U.S. S&P futures rose 0.7% after Wall Streets main indexes posted solid gains on Thursday. [.N]
European stocks rose 0.82%, on course to post small weekly gains. Britains FTSE rose 0.73%, also showing a small uptick on the week.
“While market worries about an abrupt slowdown are the culprit behind recent moves lower in raw materials prices, lower commodity prices do feel like they could be just what the doctor ordered for the global economy,” said NatWest markets strategist Brian Daingerfield.
“So much of our hard-landing fears relate to concerns that link back to commodity prices.”
The Federal Reserves commitment to reining in 40-year-high inflation is “unconditional,” U.S. central bank chief Jerome Powell told lawmakers on Thursday, while acknowledging that sharply higher interest rates may push up unemployment.
Germany is heading for a gas shortage if Russian gas supplies remain as low as they are now due to the Ukraine conflict, and certain industries would have to be shut down if there is not enough come winter, Economy Minister Robert Habeck told Der Spiegel magazine on Friday.
German business morale fell more than expected in June.
Bonds rallied hard on hopes that bets on aggressive rate hikes would have to be curtailed, with German two-year yields sliding 26 basis points on Thursday in their biggest drop since 2008.
The German 10-year yield was down 4 bps on Friday after slumping 29 bps on Thursday, and was heading for its first weekly drop since mid-May. [GVD/EUR]
The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield was steady at 3.0666% after falling 7 bps on Thursday and [US/]
Bond funds suffered their largest outflows since April 2020 in the week to Wednesday while equities lost $16.8 billion as markets were stuck in maximum bearish mode, BofAs weekly analysis of flows showed on Friday.
The U.S. dollar has slipped from last weeks 20-year highs. It was steady at $1.0529 per euro and dropped 0.2% to 134.67 yen. [FRX/]
The battered yen has steadied this week and drew a little support on Friday from Japanese inflation topping the Bank of Japans 2% target for a second straight month, putting more pressure on its ultra-easy policy stance.
MSCI‘s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 1.1%, helped by short sellers bailing out of Alibaba – which rose nearly 6% – amid hints that China’s technology crackdown is abating.
Japans Nikkei rose 1.2% for a 2% weekly gain.
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