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Stocks Climb as Yields Hold Steady; Dollar Falls: Markets Wrap

European and Asian shares advanced while U.S. equity futures climbed as benchmark Treasury yields held steady below 2.9 percent and the dollar weakened. Investor focus is shifting back to U.S. monetary policy, with two appearances set for this week from new Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell.

The Europe Stoxx 600 Index jumped to its highest level in more than three weeks, with nearly all major industry groups rallying. The dollar retreated for a third session as the pound and euro strengthened while the yen firmed to a one-week high. Russia’s ruble appreciated the most in emerging markets after S&P Global Ratings boosted its credit score to investment grade. Gold climbed and European sovereign bonds were mixed.

Powell may help set a new direction for investors at a time when some of the biggest names in markets are at odds over the implications of this month’s surge in U.S. bond yields. Morgan Stanley put out a bullish call on Treasuries Monday, countering warnings on the securities from Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Warren Buffett. Bond traders are still pricing less than the three quarter-point interest-rate hikes that Fed officials have signaled as likely this year.

Elsewhere, Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said the central bank has no plan to overhaul its current form of easing, adding that he saw no need to do another comprehensive assessment of the effectiveness of the bank’s policies. Oil futures steadied as Saudi Oil Minister Khalid Al-Falih said OPEC and its allies may ease output curbs in 2019 in a way that won’t disturb the market. Bitcoin fluctuated around $9,500.
Terminal users can read more in our markets blog.

Here are some key events scheduled for this week:

These are the main moves in markets:

Stocks

Currencies

Bonds

Commodities

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