GLOBAL MARKETS-Bond yields resume rise, euro cheers Macron-Le Pen clash

In This Article:

* Euro, CAC40 rise after Macron-Le Pen TV clash

* Bond yields drive higher as rate hike bets regain traction

* Solid Tesla earnings help offset Netflix drama

* Oil rises but stays well below March highs

By Marc Jones

LONDON, April 21 (Reuters) - Bond yields resumed their rise on Thursday as investor bet on aggressive global interest rate hikes, while the euro climbed after a heated TV debate saw French President Emmanuel Macron bolster his weekend re-election hopes.

MSCI's main world stock market index barely mustered a move amid the prospect of higher global borrowing costs, but Paris stocks scored a 1.1% jump after Wednesday evening's clash between Macron and far-right rival Marine Le Pen.

Although Le Pen came across as more polished and composed than in a TV duel for the presidency in 2017, Macron needled her over her ties to Russia's leadership, her plans for the economy and her policy for the European Union.

One poll showed 59% of viewers thought Macron had been the most convincing in the nearly three-hour-long tussle, suggesting his pre-debate 56%-44% lead in the race had at least been maintained ahead of Sunday's runoff vote.

"Yes, Emmanuel Macron won but his adversary has avoided a repeat of last time's disaster," Gerard Araud, a former French ambassador said on Twitter. "This debate doesn't disqualify her like the one in 2017, but it doesn't help her close the gap either."

Investors were otherwise back to focusing on the war in Ukraine and how fast interest rates will have to rise around the world as the conflict with Russia adds to what were already intense global inflationary pressures.

Most 10-year bond yields across Europe rose sharply again, with Germany's benchmark Bund yields heading back towards a seven-year peak and Italy's hitting their highest since March 2020's initial COVID panic..

Markets are expecting at least another half-percentage-point rate hike from the U.S. Federal Reserve next month while one European Central Bank policymaker had said on Wednesday that it might start hiking euro zone rates as early as July.

Citi's Global Markets Strategist Matt King said that the pressure for markets was also coming from quantitative tightening, or QT - the process of years of frantic central bank money-printing going into reverse.

That process is just about to start and over the next year he estimates it will see around half a trillion dollars being sucked out of the global financial system by the U.S. Fed alone.

"Don't look at the real yields, look at the liquidity flow," King said, adding that a rough calculation was that $1 trillion of QT would knock global stocks down by around 10%.