Investors bet rise in US interest rate could come this month

Irish shares jump 2.4% to 14-month high on CRH results and spending pledge by Trump

The New York Stock Exchange. Market analysts said investor sentiment was underpinned, but not driven, by Mr Trump’s first address to Congress. Photograph: Reuters
The New York Stock Exchange. Market analysts said investor sentiment was underpinned, but not driven, by Mr Trump’s first address to Congress. Photograph: Reuters

Irish shares jumped 2.4 per cent on Wednesday to a 14-month high as investors globally moved out of bonds and into equities on bets that a US interest rate hike could come this March.

The Iseq index's rise to 6,705.05 points was also driven by a strong set of full-year results from index heavyweight CRH and US president Donald Trump's commitment in a speech on Tuesday evening (US time) to his $1 trillion infrastructure spending plan.

However, the wider markets took their cue from the president of the New York Federal Reserve, William Dudley, saying late on Tuesday that the case for raising interest rates had become "a lot more compelling".

The Dow Jones Industrial Average in New York had gained 1.4 per cent to breach the 21,100-point level for the first time after European markets closed.

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The Federal Reserve has only twice hiked interest rates since the onset of the financial crisis, in December 2015 and December 2016.

The dollar rose by as much as 0.6 per cent to $1.0514 against the euro.

Financial market analysts said that investor sentiment was underpinned, but not driven, by Mr Trump using his first address to Congress to move from his recent rhetoric of carnage and conflict to strike a softer tone – even if he provided few new details on policy.

Ironic twist

“In a curiously ironic twist,

Donald Trump

at his most presidential – and least fiery – lost his ability to move the currency markets,” said

David Lamb

, head of currency dealing at Fexco Corporate Payments.

Analysts at Citi said: “The general bipartisan tone of the event and the optimistic and cohesive nature of his comments has been cited [as] a positive.”

Meanwhile, the prospect of the European Central Bank easing back on its quantitative easing (QE) bond-buying programme may be drawing near after initial data from several German states suggested the country's inflation rate rose by more than 2 per cent last month. The ECB targets inflation of just under 2 per cent across the euro zone.

Joe Brennan

Joe Brennan

Joe Brennan is Markets Correspondent of The Irish Times