European stocks have risen, rallying after losses in Asia, as concerns about the health of banks that have hammered shares globally in recent days eased and oil prices recovered from Tuesday’s steep falls. The more upbeat tone took the shine off safer assets such as the Japanese yen and low-risk government debt, though gold powered ahead for the eighth day in nine.
In a volatile day, shares did lose some early gains in afternoon trading, though gained again late in the day as US shares gained some ground.
Investors and traders were closely monitoring Congressional testimony from Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen for clues to the outlook for monetary policy. Her comments, referring to risks facing the world economy, were taken to indicate that the Fed would not rush further interest rate increases. Falls in global stocks and weak U.S. economic data have led markets to slash expectations for the pace and extent of Fed interest rate rises to follow December's first hike in nearly a decade.
In Dublin, share prices reflected the better international mood. Bank of Ireland shares rose by almost 9 per cent this morning to 27 cent, before easing to 26 cent, a rise of just under 5 per cent. The ISEQ index of Irish shares finished some 3 per cent higher , having been up 3.5 per cent earlier, after a volatile but generally positive day. Smurfit Kappa was the bigger winner on the market, with its shares rising 14 per cent to €20.9 after strong 2015 annual results, before easing slightly to €20.421. Market sources said short-covering – investors who are short of the stock balancing their positions after the good results – was likely responsible for much of the increase.
The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index rose by 1.8 per cent on the day with investors cheered by a Financial Times report that Deutsche Bank was considering buying back several billion euros of its debt. Germany’s flagship lender, whose shares have fallen almost 40 percent this year, rose more than 12 percent in early trading, and was trading some 10 per cent higher this afternoon.
“The rebound in Deutsche Bank is helping to reassure some investors who had been concerned about possible contagion in the banking sector,” said Francois Savary, chief investment officer at Geneva-based Prime Partners.
The FTSEurofirst index has fallen for the last seven trading days and on Tuesday hit its lowest since September 2013. The big banks' fortunes are seen as closely linked with the global growth outlook, which is faltering, while the adoption by several major central banks of negative interest rates to help lift growth has hit their business. Those concerns have spread across the globe and on Wednesday helped drive Tokyo's Nikkei index to its lowest since 2014. Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group fell 7.1 percent. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 0.3 percent. Australian stocks touched a 2 1/2-year trough and closed down 1.2 percent Oil prices, which fell 8 percent on Tuesday, picked up after Iran said it was open to cooperation with Saudi Arabia on current conditions in the market.
Brent crude, the international benchmark, rose 73 cents to $31.05 a barrel, though prices were expected to stay volatile. Rising stocks dulled the appeal of perceived “safe-haven” assets, among which the yen has shone lately. The Japanese currency, gained 0.5 percent against the dollar but was below a 15-month high hit on Tuesday. It last traded at 114.50 yen per dollar. The euro was marginally firmer at $1.1295.
BNP Paribas currency strategist Michael Sneyd, in London, said Fed chair Yellen’s testimony, due at 1330 GMT, was unlikely to provide any kind of rebound for the dollar. “It seems we’re likely to remain in this regime where the dollar continues to lose ground against the euro and the yen.” German 10-year government bond yields, another safe haven, edged up just 0.6 basis points to 0.24 percent.
“The risk backdrop remains fragile ... however, now that the oil price has stabilised, Bunds are trading unchanged to slightly weaker,” said Alexander Aldinger, senior analyst at Bayerische Landesbank. Ten-year Japanese government bonds closed in Tokyo yielding 0.005 percent, having hit a record low of -0.035 percent. The JGB yield went negative on Tuesday, in the wake of the Bank of Japan’s introduction of negative policy rates on Jan. 31. Gold, another asset sought in times of trouble, rose towards a 7 1/2-month high. It was last at $1,186.80 an ounce.