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Global stocks rise sharply with investors’ renewed risk appetite; oil settles up

Reuters

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Global stocks rise sharply with investors’ renewed risk appetite; oil settles up

WALL STREET. Traders work on the trading floor at the New York Stock Exchange in Manhattan, New York City, December 20, 2021.

Andrew Kelly/Reuters

MSCI's gauge of stocks across the globe gains 1.61%, while oil prices settle up more than 3% on Tuesday, December 21

NEW YORK, USA – Wall Street closed significantly higher on Tuesday, December 21, after a bruising session the prior day, with oil prices also gaining as investors sought riskier assets despite surging cases of the Omicron coronavirus variant.

US President Joe Biden said on Tuesday he would be taking steps to fight the Omicron variant, by opening federal testing sites in New York City and buying 500 million at-home tests Americans can order online for free. Israel is set to offer a fourth dose of the COVID-19 vaccination to people over 60 years old.

World shares had fallen earlier in the week after Omicron infections multiplied around the world, but strong corporate earnings and reports that Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine provides protection against the variant gave investors hope on Tuesday. US stocks had also taken a hit after Biden’s $1.75-trillion spending bill was dealt a potentially fatal blow on Sunday, December 19.

“We think this was kind of overdue over the past couple of weeks. We’re kind of set up for a rally in time for Santa Claus, which officially begins next Monday (December 27),” said Scott Brown, technical market strategist at LPL Financial, explaining that a so-called Santa Claus rally can happen in the last five trading days of the year and first two of the new year.

“We think we’ve had a little bit of a washout. We saw a lot of fear rush into the market.”

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 1.6% to 35,492.7, and the S&P 500 gained 1.78% to 4,649.23. The Nasdaq Composite added 2.4% to close at 15,341.09.

MSCI’s gauge of stocks across the globe gained 1.61%.

Oil prices settled up more than 3% despite signs of improving supply and concerns the spread of Omicron would curb travel and crimp demand for fuel.

Brent crude settled up $2.46, or 3.4%, at $73.98 a barrel, and US West Texas Intermediate crude rose $2.51, or 3.7%, to $71.12 a barrel.

The United States is considering cutting quarantine time for people with COVID-19. The chief executive officer of Delta Air Lines asked the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to slash quarantine time to 5 days from 10.

A somber US trading session on Monday, December 20, underscored market fears that rapidly rising cases of the coronavirus variant would yet again force governments around the world to impose lockdown measures, potentially choking off fragile economic recoveries from similar measures earlier in the year.

Still, investors on Tuesday were cautiously optimistic that the economic hit would be less severe this time, as they bought stocks and sold perceived safe-haven currencies such as the dollar and Japanese yen.

The US Dollar Currency Index fell slightly as investors ploughed money into riskier currencies.

The yen, considered a safe-haven asset, was flat versus the greenback at 114.08 per dollar.

US Treasury yields rose on Tuesday as traders set their sights on optimistic economic conditions, and brushed aside inflation fears at a 20-year bond auction.

Elsewhere, cryptocurrencies – which often offer a reliable gauge to risk sentiment – gained ground. Bitcoin added more than 4% after trending lower in recent weeks. – Rappler.com

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