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European stocks rise as investors remain optimistic about rate cuts

The European stock market made a small gain on Friday. It is on track to make a modest advance for the week after the U.S. Federal Reserve cut rates.

For the first time in December, the U.S. Federal Reserve lowered interest rates on Wednesday by a quarter percentage point. Norway and Canada cut rates as well.

Wall Street closed Thursday at a new record, but in Asian trading Nikkei fell from its previous record after the Bank of Japan announced a further winding down of its stimulus policy.

The MSCI World Equity Index was not much changed at 0923 GMT. The pan-European STOXX 600 index was up by 0.1% and London's FTSE 100 index was flat.

Investors bet that the central bank's rate reductions will further boost stock prices.

Amelie Derambure is the senior multi-assets portfolio manager at Amundi. She said: "For the coming weeks, we will continue to maintain a risk-on approach in our portfolios. We continue to overweight equities."

Our stance is the market will continue to rise in the next few weeks with some volatility.

The Fed did not endorse market expectations of a string of rate reductions, instead focusing on a meeting by meeting, data-dependent, approach. Analysts said that the Fed's tone and the diverse views of the central bank disappointed some investors who had hoped for a rapid change to lower interest rates.

The markets are waiting to hear any news about a phone call between Chinese president Xi Jinping, and U.S. president Donald Trump. It is expected that the two will discuss the TikTok agreement and tariffs.

After data revealed a rise in borrowing by the public sector, the British pound dropped 0.4% to $1.3504 and UK gilt yields increased.

The Bank of England kept its rates unchanged on Thursday, but it slowed down the rate at which it unloaded the government bonds that it had purchased during previous crises.

The U.S. Dollar index, which was up 0.2% to 97.509, is a little higher.

The pair is now trading at 147.82.

The yields on German 10-year government bonds rose to 2.7361% . Während shorter-dated bonds benefited from the expectation of rate reductions, longer-dated yields rose on investor concerns about government finances.

The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) warned this week about the disconnect between record global share prices and signals on the bond markets that investors are worried about government debt.

The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury was 4.1255%.

Oil prices fell as traders' concerns about fuel demand overshadowed the usual boost to oil prices that would come from a U.S. interest rate cut.

Gold rose 0.4% to $3,656.4 and is on track for its fifth consecutive week of gains.

(source: Reuters)