European shares hit a 14-year high and the euro fell yesterday after the European Central Bank affirmed its loose policy stance, while US stocks rallied after several strong earnings reports.

Weak data out of China bolstered expectations of additional monetary stimulus that would likely help risk assets such as equities.

The euro lost ground against the dollar, falling to $1.0596 in a volatile session as traders weighed comments from ECB President Mario Draghi after the bank said it expects to continue its asset-purchase program of 60 billion a month. The ECB kept interest rates unchanged at record lows.

“Our focus will be on the full implementation of our monetary policy measures,” Draghi said.

A German auction saw 10-year borrowing costs for the eurozone’s biggest economy reach a record low.

US stocks rallied, helped by better-than-expected results from banks JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo and earnings from Intel that were broadly in line with expectations.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 87.88 points, or 0.49 per cent, to 18,124.58, the S&P 500 gained 10.86 points, or 0.52 per cent, to 2,106.7 and the Nasdaq Composite added 23.26 points, or 0.47 per cent, to 5,000.54.

Data earlier showed growth in China’s economy slowed to a six-year low of seven per cent in the first quarter, better than many feared after a woeful trade performance in March.

But both retail sales and industrial output missed forecasts, intensifying Beijing’s struggle to find the right policy mix to shore up activity.

“Unless one can make a very good case or suggestion that we’ll see a rebound in April or May, then it does look as if more easing from the People’s Bank [of China] is on the cards,” said Investec chief economist Philip Shaw.

The pan-European Eurofirst 300 index of leading shares rose 0.8 per cent to 1,653.62, its highest since late 2000. News that Finnish telecom equipment maker Nokia has agreed to buy France’s Alcatel-Lucent helped the push higher.

Shanghai stocks were volatile, falling more than one per cent on the Chinese data but recovering to be marginally positive.

The euro was down 0.7 per cent at $1.0598 and was 0.6 per cent lower against the yen at 126.42 yen. The eurozone common currency hit a one-month low against the dollar of $1.05205 on Monday.

German 10-year borrowing costs, the benchmark for eurozone debt, fell close to zero as a Bund auction showed there were enough private investors willing to compete with the ECB for the top-rated, almost yield-free paper. The yield hit a low of 0.107 percent; the 10-year US yield was at 1.88 per cent.

Brent crude oil prices rose 2.6 per cent to $59.94 a barrel after a forecast that US shale oil output would record its first monthly decline in more than four years.

US crude futures were up 4.3 per cent at $55.60.

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