Japanese stocks rose for a third day,
driving benchmark indexes to their first weekly gain in a month, after
U.S. reports showed an unexpected increase in pending home sales and
improved retail sales.
“Investors
are kind of relieved because a downward spiral in the global economy
had a pause this week,” said Naoki Fujiwara at Shinkin Asset Management
Co. “But investors won’t jump into buying shares just because of that,
since there is still a strong sense of uncertainty.”
The Nikkei,
which sank to its lowest level in 16 months in intraday trading two days
ago, increased 1.4% last week, and the Topix gained 0.5%.
The Topix has fallen 18% from its high this year on April 15
on concern Europe’s debt crisis and China’s steps to curb property
prices will slow global economic growth. Stocks in the index trade at
14.7 times estimated earnings on average, near the lowest level since
April 2009.
European stocks posted the biggest weekly gain since July
as reports from the U.S. and China reassured investors that the
economic recovery is not faltering and takeover speculation increased.
Rio
Tinto Group and Xstrata Plc led an advance in basic- resource shares as
manufacturing in China grew at a faster pace in August.
Daimler AG rose 8.5% as Mercedes-Benz sales advanced in August.
Yell Group Plc soared 13% as investors speculated that one or more companies are preparing a takeover bid for the company.
The Stoxx Europe 600 Index climbed 3.7% last week
“We’ve
had very encouraging economic data this week,” said Matthias Jasper at
WGZ Bank AG. “People have been too negative and we’re going to see
higher prices on equity markets in the coming weeks.”
National benchmark indexes climbed in all but one of the 18 western European markets. France’s CAC 40 Index advanced 4.7%,
while Germany’s DAX Index rose 3.1%
and the U.K.’s FTSE 100 Index soared 5.3%.
All industry groups in the Stoxx 600 rose last week.European
basic-resource shares rose 6.8% for the week, the best performance
among 19 industry groups in the Stoxx Europe 600 Index.
Continental
AG jumped 8.8%, the shares’ biggest weekly advance since June. Europe’s
second-largest auto parts supplier, raised 1 billion euros ($1.3
billion) in the region’s first junk bond, or high-yield note, sale in a
month.
A measure of European automobile and automobile part shares
climbed 6.4% in the week, the second-best performance among 19 industry
groups in the Stoxx 600 Index.
U.S. stocks rose,
with the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index gaining a fourth day, as
better-than- estimated growth in private payrolls eased concern the
economy is sliding back into a recession.
JPMorgan
Chase & Co., the second-biggest U.S. bank, gained 2.3% and
Caterpillar Inc. advanced 2.6% as private employers climbed 67,000 last
month.
Monster Worldwide Inc., the online-recruiting company, increased 7.4%.
H&R
Block Inc. surged 7.3% after posting a narrower quarterly loss as the
company seeks to win back from online rivals such as Intuit Inc.’s
TurboTax.
Financial stocks were the biggest gainers among 10 industries in the S&P 500.The S&P 500 rose 3.6% last week (its longest winning streak since July).
Index jumped after a report showed
private payrolls that exclude government agencies climbed 67,000,
after a revised 107,000 increase in July that was more than initially
estimated. The median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News
called for a gain of 40,000. Overall employment fell 54,000 for a second
month and the unemployment rate rose to 9.6% as more people entered the
labor force.
“In order for the economy to be self sustaining you
have to put people back to work,” said Michael Mullaney at Fiduciary
Trust Co.. “People had been really fearing that there was going to be a
chance of a double dip and that seems to be abating right now. Last week
or so you’re starting to get some positive surprises on the economic
data so that lends support to the market.”