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Stocks rise, Treasury yields increase on the hope of a reopened US government

MSCI's global equity gauge rose 1.4% on Sunday, while government bond yields increased modestly. This was on bets that the U.S. shutdown would soon come to an end.

On Sunday, the U.S. Senate advanced a measure that would end the shutdown. The shutdown is now in its fourth day and has caused federal workers to be sidelined, food aid to be delayed, air travel to be obstructed, and the government's economic data not released.

The House of Representatives must approve the bill if the Senate passes it. This would fund the federal government until the end of January and include three full-year budget bills.

The Nasdaq Composite gained 522.64 or 2.27% points to 23,527.17, its largest daily gain since May 27, and the S&P 500 rose 103.63 or 1.54% points to 6,832.43, its biggest percentage gain in a single day since October 13. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 381.53 points or 0.81% to 47,368.63.

Robert Pavlik said that there is a greater willingness to accept additional risk, because the possibility of the government reopening this week has increased. Right now, it's more of a relief rally.

Pavlik stated that investors are concerned about anecdotal evidence "of people staying home and spending less" and they are anxious to resume official economic reports in order to get "hard evidence."

He said that investors were increasingly focused on valuations.

The MSCI index of global stocks rose by 13.65 points or 1.38% to 1,004.97. This is its largest daily gain since June. The pan-European STOXX 600 closed earlier up 1.42%.

Despite the fact that last week's nongovernment data raised concerns about a weakening U.S. labour market, Federal Reserve officials have reiterated their preference to be cautious in further rate reductions.

Alberto Musalem, President of the St. Louis Federal Reserve, said that the Fed, with the inflation rate closer to 3%, than its 2% target, an economy in resilience, accommodative financial conditions, and a monetary policy near neutral, should "tread carefully" when it comes to further interest rates cuts.

According to CME Group’s FedWatch tool, traders are pricing in an approximately 64% chance that the central banks will reduce rates by 25 basis point next month.

Fed Governor Stephen Miran stated on Monday that a rate cut of 50 basis points would be appropriate in December. He noted that the inflation rate was falling, while the unemployment rate was rising.

Investors favored riskier assets as they hoped for an end to government shutdown.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year note rose by 2.7 basis point to 4.12% from 4.093% at Friday's close, while the 30-year bond rate rose by 0.9 basis point to 4.7103%.

The yield on the 2-year bond, which is usually in line with expectations of interest rates for the Federal Reserve rose by 3.8 basis points, to 3.595% from 3.557%.

Safe haven currencies, including the Australian Dollar, fell against the U.S. dollar as the risk sentiment was boosted following signs that the U.S. Government is nearing a reopening.

The Australian dollar rose 0.71% against the greenback, to $0.6537. Meanwhile, the New Zealand kiwi increased 0.32% to $0.5644, and the Canadian dollar rose 0.22% to C$1.402 a dollar.

The dollar gained 0.46% against the Japanese yen to $1.1559 and the euro fell 0.05%.

Bitcoin gained 1%, reaching $105,550.98.

Investors bet on rate reductions after signs of economic slowdown last week, while a weaker US dollar provided support.

Spot gold increased by 2.82%, to $4.111.58 per ounce. U.S. Gold Futures increased 2.72% to $4108.20 per ounce.

The oil prices rose on Monday, after fluctuating between gains and losses throughout the session. Analysts focused on possible fuel supply disruptions due to fresh U.S. sanction and Ukrainian drone strikes on Russian refineries. However, predictions of an excess crude supply kept gains in check.

U.S. crude oil settled up 0.64% or 38 cents to $60.13 a barrel. Brent settled at $64.06 per barrel, up by 0.68% or 43 cents. (Reporting and editing by Sinead carew, Nell Mackenzie, and Rae Wee.)

(source: Reuters)