US stocks hovered in a tight range on Monday as investors took a cautious stance ahead of this week’s inflation data and kept close tabs on China’s Covid-19 measures.
Wall Street’s benchmark S&P 500 rose 0.3 per cent and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite fell 0.1 per cent in early New York trading.
Investors have feared the impact on global economic growth of aggressive rate rises from the Federal Reserve, which signalled last week that interest rates will increase higher than previously expected. A US jobs report on Friday also indicated the labour market was still running hot, although a small rise in the jobless rate helped ease those concerns. A reading on inflation in the world’s biggest economy, due later this week, will help provide further clues on the trajectory for rate rises.
Traders, meanwhile, continued to bet that China would soften its zero-Covid policy, a move they hope will boost flagging global economic growth. The dollar index, which measures the US currency against a basket of peers, fell 0.6 per cent.
China equities rose sharply, before trimming their gains, as the government said there would be no change to its stringent Covid prevention measures. The daily number of Covid infections in China hit a six-month high of 4,420 on Saturday, official data showed. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index added 2.7 per cent, while China’s CSI 300 rose 0.2 per cent.
Emmanuel Cau, European equity strategist at Barclays, said a “quick and broad reopening [in China] seems highly unlikely”, but that “there may be a case for authorities to turn more supportive of growth into 2023, which could be a game changer for markets”.
Adding to the sense of uncertainty, Chinese exports also contracted 0.3 per cent in October compared with the same period a year before, well below economists’ forecasts of a 4.3 per cent expansion. Imports also shrank 0.7 per cent, missing expectations for 0.1 per cent growth, according to customs data released on Monday.
Elsewhere in Asia, Japan’s Topix rose 1 per cent and South Korea’s Kospi gained 1 per cent. Europe’s Stoxx 600 was up 0.3 per cent by Monday afternoon having finished last week 1.5 per cent higher. The FTSE 100 fell 0.4 per cent.
European gas prices fell sharply on Monday, with Dutch TTF gas futures, the region’s benchmark contract, down as much as 10 per cent to €108 per megawatt hour. The wholesale European gas price hit an intraday high of €343 per MWh in late August but has dropped thanks to relatively warm weather and greater than expected supplies.
Investors welcomed better than expected German economic data. Industrial production rose 0.6 per cent month on month in September, better than the 0.2 per cent decline expected by economists polled by Reuters. Even so, Franziska Palmas, an economist at Capital Economics, maintained that Europe’s largest economy would plunge into a “deep recession” in the new year.
In government bond markets, the yield on the two-year Treasury added 0.06 percentage points to 4.71 per cent, while the yield on the 10-year was up 0.03 percentage points at 4.19 per cent.