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© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A huge electric stock price board is seen inside a building in Tokyo, Japan on December 30, 2022. REUTERS/Isei Kato
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By Neil Mackenzie
(Reuters) – Global stocks gradually rose, European bond yields fell and the dollar held steady in light trade on Monday after warnings from the International Monetary Fund’s managing director that a third of the world would fall into recession in 2023.
MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific stocks outside Japan rose 0.04%, slightly behind the global stock index, which rose 0.18%.
The pan-European index rose 0.8%, recouping some of the nearly 12% lost in 2022, weighed down by central banks’ tight monetary policy.
Traders were reluctant to trust the early year starts in stock and bond movements, with many markets closed for a holiday and ahead of a batch of economic numbers due this week.
Inflation data from Europe, minutes from the US Federal Reserve’s December meeting and US labor market figures were some of the highlights that Danske Piet Bank chief analyst Heines Christiansen said were worth watching.
“I’m going to be careful about interpreting any moves this morning,” Christiansen said.
Markets were closed in Britain, Hong Kong, Ireland, Japan, Singapore, Canada and the United States.
Christiansen expected to start the new year with a renewed focus on central banking and inflation. He said traders would be alert to any signs of an impending recession.
He said the rebound in stock prices in Europe may be due to the survey results published on Monday, which indicated a recovery in optimism among factory managers in the eurozone.
The S&P Global final manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) rebounded to 47.8 in December from 47.1 in November, matching the preliminary reading but below the 50 mark that separates growth from contraction.
“Europe is taking the latest round of PMIs well enough that the final readings help confirm the view (hopefully?) that the worst may be over for EU bloc manufacturers, especially with energy prices falling back to last February levels.” Ross Mold, chief investment officer at AJ Bell, wrote in emailed comments.
The dollar is struggling to maintain its strength
Elsewhere, the dollar was up nearly 0.2% against a basket of major currencies, while the pound and the euro were down 0.4% and 0.2%, respectively.
“There is an attempt on the part of the bank to go higher today, but we see that it is losing a significant part of the strength it gained last year,” said Ulrich Luchtmann, Head of Forex Research at Commerzbank (ETR:).
“After the last Fed meeting, the market wasn’t convinced that the Fed wouldn’t cut interest rates later in 2023. It’s going to be an interesting year.”
US Treasury bonds will resume trading on Tuesday after a public holiday on Monday.
German government bond yields fell on Monday from their highest levels in more than a decade amid hawkish signals from the European Central Bank.
European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde said wages in the eurozone were growing faster than previously thought, and the central bank must prevent this from adding to already high inflation.
The German 10-year bund yield fell 12 basis points to 2.44%, after hitting its highest level since 2011 at 2.57% on Friday.
A Reuters poll conducted on Friday showed that oil markets are closed, but prices in 2023 were heading for slight gains against a dark economic backdrop and that the outbreak of Covid-19 in China threatens demand growth and offsets the impact of supply shortages caused by sanctions on Russia.
Kristalina Georgieva, managing director of the International Monetary Fund, said Sunday on CBS’ “Face the Nation” Sunday morning that the new year will be “tougher than the year we leave behind.”
“Why? Because the three big economies – the United States, the European Union and China – are all slowing down simultaneously,” she said.