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Global stocks extend recovery

AFP . London
29 Apr 2022 00:00:00 | Update: 29 Apr 2022 07:17:06
Global stocks extend recovery
A stock broker works at Frankfurt’s stock exchange as markets react on the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), at the stock exchange in Frankfurt, Germany

Stock markets powered higher Thursday, extending a recovery on bargain hunting after sharp losses at the start of the week.

In foreign exchange, the dollar traded around 20-year peaks versus the yen and at the highest level in more than five years against the euro as the Federal Reserve aggressively hikes US interest rates.

Trading is volatile across major assets as investors remain on high alert over a range of crises including the Ukraine war, surging inflation, higher interest rates and Chinese Covid lockdowns. National Australia Bank’s Rodrigo Catril said “risk assets in general still need to navigate the consequences from what looks to be an increasingly more aggressive policy tightening by many central banks”.

He added that “China’s zero-Covid policy remains in place and the prospect of a protracted Russia-Ukraine conflict does not bode well for the energy prices and energy supply for Europe in particular.”

The ongoing earnings season has meanwhile seen a mixed bag of results that have weighed on tech firms, though there was some cheer from a forecast-beating reading by Facebook parent Meta on Wednesday, which analysts said could provide some relief to the sector.

Investors took heart also from a report by China’s state broadcaster CCTV that said officials had promised more policies on boosting the nation’s employment.

Unemployment in China -- the world’s second biggest economy after the United States -- has recently jumped on fresh Covid lockdowns in major cities including Shanghai.

It comes at a time of surging inflation that is causing central banks around the globe to hike interest rates.

Sweden’s central bank on Thursday became the latest to lift rates, from zero to 0.25 percent. The Federal Reserve is next week expected to lift US interest rates by half a point and signal further big increases through the year.

So far the European Central Bank has refused to tighten borrowing costs and on Thursday ECB vice-president Luis de Guindos said a surge in eurozone consumer prices is “very close” to reaching its peak.

Soaring prices are impacting consumers and businesses.

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