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Asian shares rise on tech rally, renewed stimulus hopes - Investing.com

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2/2 © Reuters. Passersby wearing protective masks walk past an electronic board showing Japan's Nikkei average, in Tokyo © Reuters. Passersby wearing protective masks walk past an electronic board showing Japan's Nikkei average, in Tokyo 2/2

By Marc Jones

LONDON (Reuters) - After the slide it was the see-saw for markets on Friday, as stocks in large parts of the world, the euro and Dr all headed for their worst weeks since peak coronavirus panic, and the dollar cemented its best run since April.

Asia had managed to end its worst week since the global March meltdown with a modest gain and Europe's main bourses started broadly steady, but with both France and Britain now notching up almost record numbers of new virus cases the mood was jittery.

London's clawed up 0.2% but Frankfurt's and the in Paris were down 0.2% and 0.4% leaving the pan-European index down more than 3%, and travel stocks down over 6% for the first time since June.

There had been a flicker of hope overnight after squabbling U.S. political parties rekindled talk of another super-sized stimulus package, but the rise in the dollar and demand for safe U.S. and German government bonds remained.

In contrast, the drop in sentiment has hit emerging market debt, especially countries with weak credit ratings, like a wrecking ball. Argentina's newly restructured bonds have lost around 25% making it the worst return to markets since Greece in 2012.

"It has been a very interesting week" said Saxo Bank's head of FX strategy John Hardy. "We have seen the dollar come back and what is interesting this time is that there also some element of dollar liquidity stress in it again too."

He said the talk of more U.S. stimulus ahead of the November Presidential election was likely to just be "show boating" especially with a fierce battle over a seat on the Supreme Court now thrown into the mix.

"I just can't see anyway that the Democrats can make a deal here with this endgame into the election... it's dirty politics all the way now".

On Wall Street overnight, the rose 0.2%, the S&P 500 gained 0.30% and the added 0.37%.

While the economic picture in the U.S. remains clouded, the strongest sales of single-family homes in nearly 14 years in August helped to revive some faith in the recovery.

It helped nudge the benchmark up to 0.6725% from a close of 0.664% on Thursday. German Bunds ticked up to -0.5% on the day too, but were set for a weekly drop as the growing number of coronavirus cases in Europe fed demand for safety.

In the currency markets, the dollar was hovering near Thursday's two-month highs, at 105.40 versus the yen and pushing the euro down to $1.1656 on course for its worst week since the end of March/start of April.

also made gains after the country's government bond gained long-awaited entry into one of the world's most influential bond benchmarks, the FTSE Russell WGBI.

The dollar's strength this week has also battered commodities, with gold set for its worst week in more than a month. On Friday, was steady at $1,865.16 per ounce.

Copper, which gets its "Dr Copper" nickname from its history as a bellwether of global economic health, was set for its worst week since the March panic with a near 4% drop, while was down 2% on the week but 0.8% better off on the day at $42.2 per barrel.

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