Global Stocks Jump, Led by China Rebound
August 12 2019 - 4:10AM
Dow Jones News
By Avantika Chilkoti
-- Chinese stocks rise as yuan's slow devaluation continues
-- European markets climb, led by Germany
Stocks across the globe rallied Monday, with Chinese markets
advancing by the most in over a month, following a roller-coaster
week in which U.S.-China trade tensions shook asset prices across
the board.
The Shanghai Composite Index climbed 1.5% after the Chinese
central bank set the yuan at a stronger rate than traders had
expected -- 7.0211 to the dollar -- easing concerns of a quick
devaluation after President Trump last week accused China of
manipulating its currency.
The benchmark Stoxx Europe 600 index gained 0.9%, led by a 1%
advance in Germany's DAX.
The positive turn in markets comes despite fresh gloom around
U.S.-China trade talks, with Mr. Trump on Friday suggesting that
negotiations could break off.
Among the biggest gainers in Europe was Tullow Oil, whose shares
rose 17% after the company said it had found more oil off the coast
of Guyana. Shares in ams AG, a 3-D sensor maker that supplies to
Apple, dropped 9% on reports that the Austrian company has put in a
bid to take over German lighting company Osram Licht, creating a
bidding war with private-equity buyers. Shares in Osram were up 10%
early Monday.
In Asia, amid a day of light trading with a number of regional
exchanges closed, Cathay Pacific fell 4.5%, putting the Hong Kong
airline on course to close at its lowest level in more than a
decade. China's aviation authority on Friday ordered the carrier to
remove all employees involved in the protests in Hong Kong from
flights to mainland China. The most closely watched class of shares
in Swire Pacific, the Hong Kong conglomerate that is Cathay's
largest shareholder, fell nearly 6%.
This week, investors will be watching for new consumer price
inflation estimates from the U.S. on Tuesday after the U.S. Federal
Reserve cited subdued inflation as one reason for cutting rates
last week. Consumer prices increased 0.1% between May and June.
"Given the low unemployment and strong consumer confidence in
the U.S., it's unlikely we get a recession any time soon," said
Patrick Spencer, managing director at U.S. investment firm Baird.
"It's a muddle-along economy then with markets continuing to trade
higher."
--William Horner, Steven Russolillo and Frances Yoon contributed
to this article.
Write to Avantika Chilkoti at Avantika.Chilkoti@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
August 12, 2019 04:55 ET (08:55 GMT)
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