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Stocks stretch record run, pound pauses as UK votes
Illustration shows pound banknotes · Reuters

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LONDON (Reuters) - World stocks clocked up more record highs on Thursday after U.S. data narrowed the odds on a September Fed interest rate cut, while Europe was on politics watch again as UK voters headed to the polls in national elections.

The July 4 holiday in the United States made for thin trading, amplified as investors sat on their hands to see just how large a majority the Labour Party might get when the UK's election exit poll and results start coming out around 2100 GMT.

Markets are well prepared for a change given opinion polls have for months put the centre-left party on course for a landslide victory over the Conservatives, who have held power for 14 years through both Brexit and the COVID-19 pandemic.

"Having been very negative of sterling for a very long time, institutional investors are actually going into this election quite neutral," said Michael Metcalfe, head of macro strategy at State Street Global Markets.

That is partly, he said, because political risk has surged in the likes of France, which holds the second round of its parliamentary elections in three days' time, and in the United States ahead of its Presidential vote in November.

"The UK, oddly, has ended up with a neutral position in the middle," Metcalfe said. "Also, I don't think at any point has the result (of the election) been in any doubt."

UK polling stations opened at 0600 GMT and by lunchtime London's FTSE 100 early 0.6% rise had extended to almost 1%, while sterling had crept up to $1.2760 and 84.6 pence per euro leaving it up almost 4% and 2.2% on the respective currencies since April. [/FRX]

Additional tailwinds for the FTSE came from MSCI's main global index, which notched up its latest record high after Wall Street's S&P 500 and Nasdaq had done the same ahead of the July 4 celebrations.

Across the English Channel from Britain, polls in France suggested National Rally (RN) would not win a majority of seats in Sunday's second round of Parliamentary election as mainstream parties moved to block the far right.

France's bond yields, which move inversely to price and are a proxy for government borrowing costs, still edged higher though as the country's treasury sold 10.5 billion euros ($11.3 billion) worth of bonds into the market, although it was a welcome sign that it all went smoothly. [GVD/EUR]

French bond "spreads have been tightening and sentiment has been a bit more positive," said Jussi Hiljanen, head of rates strategy at lender SEB.

A hung parliament appears the most likely result in the French elections, as left and centrist groups strike deals to try to keep Marine Le Pen's National Rally from power.