Stocks lose steam at end of solid month; British pound slips

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  • MSCI global stock index rises for seven consecutive months
  • Safe-haven bids support gold, bonds at month-end
  • Oil prices hit 3-week lows on anxiety about supply glut
  • Chinese yuan jumps to highest in over six months

 New York (Reuters): Major stock markets around the globe ended a solid May on a weak note on Wednesday, while the British pound fell as conflicting poll results stoked worries whether the ruling Conservatives could lose seats in next week's UK general election.

MSCI's global equity index, which tracks 45 stock markets, dipped 0.1%, paring its month-to-date gain to 1.8%. The index booked seven months of increases, which would be its longest monthly winning streak in over a decade.

The diminished appeal of stocks on Wednesday underpinned safe-haven bids for gold and low-risk US and German government bonds.

Oil prices declined to a three-week low as news of a rebound in Libyan production exacerbated worries about a global oversupply despite OPEC's pact to extend output cuts last week.

Despite Wednesday's losses, hopes for an economic pickup in Europe, together with signs of stability in Japan and China and moderate US growth, supported expectations for steady gains in stocks, corporate bonds and other risky assets in the near term, analysts said.

"You have some cyclical recovery in some of the major countries in Europe," said Robert Tipp, chief market strategist at PGIM Fixed Income in Newark, New Jersey. "This should be a favourable environment for risky assets."

The Dow Jones Industrial Average ended down 22.39 points, or 0.11%, at 21,007.08, the S&P 500 finished 1.12 points, or 0.05%, lower at 2,411.79 and the Nasdaq Composite closed down 4.67 points, or 0.08%, at 6,198.52.

For May, the Dow gained 0.3%; the S&P 1.2% and the Nasdaq 2.5%.

Europe's broad FTSEurofirst 300 index ended 0.1% lower, at 1,532.14. It gained 0.8% in May.

A sharp fall in euro zone inflation led investors to believe the European Central Bank will not be quite as hawkish at its policy meeting next week as had originally been expected.

Benchmark 10-year Treasury note yields were down nearly 1 basis point at 2.208%, a near two-week low, while 10-year German Bund yields hit 0.286%, the lowest in over five weeks.

The biggest mover in currencies was sterling, which shed as much as 0.5% after a YouGov poll showed the ruling Conservative Party might lose 20 of the 330 seats it holds, while the opposition Labor Party could gain nearly 30 seats, in a national election next week.

Sterling fell to a six-week low of $ 1.2770 before recovering some ground to $ 1.2887. It also slipped to 0.8722 pound per euro, not far from Friday's eight-week low of 0.8750.

The dollar fell 0.3% against a basket of currencies following weaker-than-forecast data on US pending home sales. The dollar index fell for a third month, losing 4.1% during that span.

Meanwhile, the yuan jumped to its strongest in more than six months on bets the Chinese Central Bank is now less inclined to allow the currency to weaken markedly against the greenback.

In commodities, Brent crude settled $ 1.53, or 2.95%, lower at $ 50.31 a barrel. US crude settled down $ 1.34 or 2.70% at $ 48.32 per barrel.

Spot gold prices rose $ 9.09 or 0.72%, to $ 1,271.80 an ounce. They touched a one-month high of $ 1,270.47 on Tuesday.

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