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Stocks charge ahead on U.S. data, dollar eases ahead By Reuters


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© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A man wearing a face mask is seen inside the Shanghai Stock Exchange building, as the country is hit by a novel coronavirus outbreak, at the Pudong financial district in Shanghai, China February 28, 2020. REUTERS/Aly Song

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By Herbert Lash and Marc Jones

NEW YORK/LONDON (Reuters) – Record-setting world stocks moved higher on Thursday after jobless claims data suggested the U.S. labor market was charging ahead even as new COVID-19 infections surge, while the risk of a sub-par U.S. payrolls report kept the dollar on the defensive.

Economic data from Asia and Europe was largely disappointing but the Labor Department report showed the number of Americans filing new claims for jobless benefits fell last week, while layoffs dropped to their lowest in more than 24 years in August.

The decline in layoffs should help ease concerns about the economy even if the closely watched employment report for August on Friday shows a slowdown in nonfarm payrolls growth.

MSCI’s all-country world index climbed to a new peak, while the and Nasdaq also set new highs. But value, up about 0.58%, outpaced a 0.21% gain in growth, a telling sign as the big tech powerhouses led the benchmark index higher but not the overall market.

“We don’t really have anything that you can hang your hat on and say this is where we’re going, this is the sector that I need to be involved in,” said JJ Kinahan, chief market strategist at TD Ameritrade.

“You’re going to continue to see this back and forth type of trade,” he said.

MSCI’s world stock index, which measures equity performance in 50 countries, rose 0.29% and was on track to post its fifth consecutive closing high. The broad pan-European index rose 0.23%, supported by travel, oil, car and chemicals companies ()

On Wall Street, the rose 0.38%, the S&P 500 added 0.32% and the advanced 0.21%.

Overnight in Asia, uncertainty over still-low vaccination rates in many economies and China’s zero-tolerance COVID-19 strategy kept Chinese blue-chips flat, though speculation about more fiscal stimulus offered some support. ()

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.16%. added 0.3%, South Korea fell 1%, whereas Hong Kong’s battered tech index enjoyed a fourth day of unbroken gains.

The euro remained near a one-month high versus the greenback in the wake of hawkish comments from German central bank chief Jens Weidmann, who cautioned against inflation risks and called for a slowdown in the European Central Bank’s bond buying.

The euro was up 0.23% at $1.1864.

The hawkish comments were in contrast to the Bank of Japan, which has shown no sign of tapering its massive purchases as the economy remains mired in a decades-long battle with deflation.

That helped the yen edge up 0.03% to $110.0200, while the , which tracks the greenback versus a basket of six currencies, fell 0.207% to 92.302.

U.S. Treasury yields drifted lower as the market remained on hold ahead of the government’s…



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