TOKYO/NEW YORK- Global shares vaulted to a near three-month high on Wednesday as hopes of more stimulus and further easing in social restrictions around the world outweighed caution over a host of worries from the coronavirus to growing US civil unrest.
Pan-European Euro Stoxx 50 futures were up 1.27 percent while MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan gained 1.8 percent, extending its rally into a fifth straight day to reach a level last seen on March 9.
Japan’s Nikkei rose 1.1 percent to its highest level since late February, while mainland China’s CSI300 rose 0.6 percent to break above its May peak to a 12-week high. South Korea’s Kospi gained more than 3 percent.
In those three East Asian countries, where the COVID-19 is relatively contained, the indexes have recovered substantially to be only about 5-6 percent below this year’s peaks.
E-mini futures for the US S&P 500 were up 0.2 percent in early Wednesday trade, extending the gains so far this week to 1.4 percent. The tech-heavy Nasdaq index has risen to be just over 2 percent below February’s record peak.
“The good times continue to roll in risk markets,” Mazen Issa, senior FX strategist at TD Securities, said in a report. “As intense as the rally has been, this is likely set to continue as the breadth of the equity rally has now spread outside the US”
MSCI’s gauge of stocks across the globe rose 0.3 percent, hitting a three-month high and extending the gain from its March 23 low to almost 36 percent. Despite pandemic lockdowns that have pushed many economies into contraction, the global index is down year-to-date less than 8 percent.
There are some signs of recovery in business activity as governments restart their economies.
In China, which managed to quash the outbreak by March, a closely-watched survey of service sector activity recovered to pre-epidemic levels in May.
High-frequency data, such as restaurant bookings and mobility data, shows activity is gradually recovering in many developed countries after bottoming out in April, even though a return to pre-epidemic levels still seems far-off.
Some analysts caution, however, that the rally is being driven mostly by short-covering by speculators who had sold stocks earlier on fears of a global recession.
Risks that could hobble the global economy include a second wave of COVID-19 infections, Sino-US tensions and rising social unrest in the United States following protests against policy brutality, they said.
“The gap between stock market and the real economy is growing. Many corporate executives must be now wondering why their companies’ shares are rising so much,” said Norihiro Fujito, chief investment strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities.
The US Treasury yield curve steepened, partly reflecting the sale of more government debt to finance massive stimulus efforts.
The 30-year US Treasuries yield rose to as high as 1.532 percent, its highest since mid-March.
However, expectations of central bank policy support kept shorter yields in check, boosting the yield gap between 5- and 30-year Treasuries to 118 basis points, the highest since early 2017.