NEW YORK – Global stocks mostly rose yesterday with oil prices, as growing economic optimism topped concerns over the rapidly spreading Delta Covid-19 variant.
European and US indices climbed, including the S&P 500, which won a sixth straight record following data showing a drop in US jobless claims.
As markets were closing on Wall Street, the International Monetary Fund upgraded its estimate for US growth in 2021 to 7%, saying the world’s biggest economy had enjoyed a “remarkable recovery.”
Maris Ogg, president of Tower Bridge Advisors, said investors have been impressed with the extent of pent-up demand in the US economy.
“You’ve got some runway,” Ogg said of the consumer-driven US economy and the healthy state of household incomes for many Americans.
But the World Health Organisation (WHO) warned the Delta variant of the coronavirus is driving the pandemic forward in Africa at record speeds.
The WHO also called for better monitoring of Euro 2020 football matches as Covid-19 infections climb again in Europe.
Back in the United States, new applications for unemployment benefits fell last week to 364,000, the lowest since March 14, 2020 when the pandemic lockdowns began.
The data comes ahead of today’s government jobs report for June. Analysts expect the United States added 725,000 jobs and that unemployment fell to 5.7% from 5.8%.
Analysts say a very strong jobs report could boost speculation the Federal Reserve will accelerate plans to tighten monetary policy.
Meanwhile, Eurostat data showed unemployment in the eurozone fell to 7.9%, 0.1 percentage points lower than April.
Both Paris and Frankfurt advanced, along with London, which climbed 0.6% as Japanese car maker Nissan announced a £1 billion (RM5.72 billion) investment in a new UK electric car battery factory.
Oil prices jumped after major oil-producing countries pushed back until today a decision on whether to boost production in light of rebounding petroleum demand.
A panel among the OPEC+ had recommended the group boost output by 400,000 barrels per day, which was below the 500,000 expected by analysts, said Robert Yawger, director of energy futures at Mizuho Securities. – AFP, July 2, 2021