World stocks at record high as earnings hopes offset trade angst

SYDNEY/LONDON, Jan 27 (Reuters) – World shares sat around record highs on Tuesday, as investors hoped for the best from this week’s barrage of U.S. large-cap earnings, and while President Donald Trump’s latest tariff threats left stocks largely unmoved, they did boost gold and silver still further.
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“The Greenland story is out of the way, that cleaned up positioning and now the market can focus back on fundamentals,” said Mohit Kumar, chief Europe economist at Jefferies.
“When we think about risky assets (like stocks) even Japan is a positive because that adds to fiscal expansion,” he added.
Trump’s threat to impose tariffs on several European countries over Greenland jolted markets last week.
New Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi is basing her campaign for next month’s elections on expanded stimulus measures, which have helped Japanese stocks, but hurt Japanese government bond prices and until late last week, the yen.
WORRIES ABOUT U.S. WEIGH ON DOLLAR
The dollar index, which tracks the unit against six peers, hit a four-month low on Monday, and while that was largely a function of the surge in the Japanese yen, the euro and Britain’s pound are also trading around multi-month tops. ,
And it is in commodity markets that worries about the dollar have been most apparent.
Gold rose by another 1.5% to $5,088 an ounce, just shy of Monday’s all-time high, while silver gained 8% to $112 an ounce, up a staggering 57% in January alone.
“The frenetic nature of uncertainty, coupled with a weaker dollar, have been the primary contributors to this latest leg higher (for gold),” said Christopher Louney, a commodity strategist at RBC Capital Markets.
Louney said history suggested the current gold rally could run into early September or mid-December this year, adding that prices could go as high as $7,100 per ounce at the end of the year based on its 2025 performance.
Oil prices were little changed on Tuesday as investors eye a resumption in supply from Kazakhstan with a production hit from the massive U.S. winter storm. Brent crude futures were little changed at $65.54 a barrel.
Reporting by Stella Qiu in Syndey and Alun John in London; Editing by Shri Navaratnam, Thomas Derpinghaus, William Maclean
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