
World share indexes have climbed, boosted by a sharp rise in Chinese stocks as Beijing ramped up efforts to put a floor under its slumping market.
A slew of announcements from China’s securities regulator, a reported meeting between President Xi Jinping and financial regulators, and Chinese state fund Central Huijin Investment saying it has expanded its scope of investment in exchange-trade funds, on Tuesday, highlighted the urgency with which Chinese authorities are trying to stem heavy losses in its stock market.
China’s blue-chip index plunged to a five-year low last week on the back of the country’s ailing economy, which had prompted state-backed investors, dubbed the “national team”, to step up their buying of blue-chip stock tracking index funds to support the market.
The CSI300 jumped 3.5 per cent in the wake of Tuesday’s developments, its biggest one-day percentage gain since 2022, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index rose four per cent, its most in a day in six months.
“The signals from authorities are very clear, they want to prevent the markets from falling further,” said Ryota Abe, an economist at SMBC.
The gains in China also helped European shares higher, with the broad STOXX 600 benchmark up 0.26 per cent holding near last week’s two-year high.
Britain’s FTSE 100 outperformed, rising 0.7 per cent boosted by a six per cent jump in oil major BP after it reported fourth-quarter profit of $US3 billion ($A4.6 billion), above expectations.
UBS shares fell 2.8 per cent however, after it reported higher expenses with its quarterly results, though it said it would restart share buybacks and its integration of fallen rival Credit Suisse was on track.
Nasdaq futures rose 0.3 per cent while S&P 500 futures edged 0.1 per cent higher.
In currencies, the Australian dollar jumped as much as 0.6 per cent after the country’s central bank retained a tightening bias at the conclusion of a policy meeting and warned against imminent rate cuts, pushing market timing of a first easing to later in the year.
Elsewhere, the dollar hovered near a three-month high against its major peers and last bought 148.39 yen, and sat at $US1.0745 ($A1.6545) per euro, with the greenback buoyed by the prospect of higher-for-longer US policy rates.
Fed expectations remain the main driver of market moves at present.
Data on Monday showed the US services sector growth picked up in January as new orders increased and employment rebounded, adding to growing doubts about the slew of Fed rate cuts priced in for this year, which had already been dialled back in the wake of Friday’s blockbuster U.S. jobs report.
Benchmark 10-year US Treasury yields rose around 30 basis points across Friday and Monday, their biggest two-day gain in 18 months, though were down a couple of basis points at 4.150 per cent on Tuesday.
Market pricing shows roughly 115 basis points of easing by the Fed this year, down from over 150 bps at the end of last year.
Bets for a March rate cut have also largely been priced out, and investors are becoming less certain even about a cut by May.
Benchmark German yields dipped a touch too, to 2.31 per cent also after two days of increases.
“What does worry us… is whether the ongoing strength of the US job market in January means that the US consumer will stay strong, thereby undoing the disinflationary trend, and extending tight monetary policy more indefinitely,” said Thierry Wizman, global FX and rates strategist at Macquarie.
In commodities, oil prices held largely steady as traders took stock of a visit to the Middle East by U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken to discuss a ceasefire offer in the region.
US crude shed 16 cents to $US72.62 ($A111.82) a barrel. Brent lost 11 cents to $US77.88 ($A119.92)
Gold was flat at $US2,024.1 ($A3,116.7) an ounce.
This post was originally published on Michael West.