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US stocks hit records as global rally accelerates

New York - Global stocks rallied again on Tuesday, with US markets hitting new records, as worries about the British exit from the EU fade amid confidence in more central bank easing.

The headlines were most dramatic in the US, where both the Dow and S&P 500 hit fresh records and the tech-rich Nasdaq closed above 5 000 for the first time all year.

Bourses in Paris, Frankfurt, Tokyo, Hong Kong and Shanghai all gained between one and 2.5%.

An exception was London, which finished marginally negative after the British pound strengthened at the unexpectedly quick selection of Theresa May as the new conservative leader.

Analysts said investors are scared to miss out on a big rally.

"It appears that the momentum trade is back again," said Briefing.com analyst Patrick O'Hare in a client note, describing "a market that seemingly has no inclination to dwell on the negatives".

Analysts have attributed the gains in the US to greater faith in the economic outlook of the world's biggest economy after Friday's strong June jobs report, combined with confidence the Federal Reserve will not hike interest rates anytime soon.

"It's clearly a liquidity-driven market, driven by a significant excess of US liquidity or domestic liquidity," said Hugh Johnson, an investment advisor in Albany, New York.

Markets have also gotten a lift from expectations of further easy-money policies as soon as Thursday, with a meeting of the Bank of England.

Expectations are also rising about a further stimulus in Japan after the ruling coalition of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe dominated a weekend parliamentary election.

The package could be worth around ¥10trn, Japanese media said, while earlier reports put the possible amount at double that figure.

Broad-based rally

The gains in the US were fairly broad-based, with financials, technology, energy and industrials all posting solid advances, while "defensive" sectors such as utilities and consumer staples pulled back.

US Airlines were big gainers, as American Airlines surged 11.2%, Delta Air Lines 5.5% and United Continental 8.8% following an upgrade from Deutsche Bank, which said the companies should benefit from a relatively solid US economy.

European banks were strong, with Deutsche Bank climbing 6.3%, BNP Paribas 5.2% and Barclays 2.2%.

In Germany, automakers raced forward after better-than-expected results for Daimler and strong sales for BMW. Shares in Mercedes-maker Daimler gained 4.4% and BMW 4.7%.

Nintendo once again barrelled higher as worldwide addiction to its blockbuster Pokemon GO game continued to spread. Shares of the entertainment company rocketed 12.7% higher.

But gold producers were on the wrong end of Tuesday's trade, faltering as gold prices pulled back. Barrick Gold lost 6.4% and Goldcorp 2.9%.

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