London: World stocks rose as a breakthrough in Brexit negotiations added momentum to an upswing underpinned by strong economic news from China and Japan.

Britain and the European Union (EU) struck a deal on Friday to move on to talk about trade and a transition period after they agreed to the outline of their divorce deal.

Shares across the continent surged on the news, and even Britain’s FTSE 100 Index, which tends to move inversely with sterling, was higher through the day despite an early rally for the British currency.

Sterling was up nearly half a per cent against the euro at one stage. And though the rally lost steam as the session wore on, it was still close to a six-month high against the single currency hit earlier in the session.

“I think we’ve seen a classic case of the rumour being bought and the fact sold, with sterling having rallied early last week in anticipation of a deal being close,” said OANDA analyst Craig Erlam.

“We could see more upside in the pound in the coming months but as it was before, the road ahead is bumpy and that will be reflected in the currency markets.” The pan-European share index rose 0.8 per cent, pushing the MSCI world equity index, which tracks shares in 47 countries, up 0.2 per cent.

European banking shares were among the biggest gainers after financial regulators reached a long-sought deal on Thursday to harmonise global banking rules, but said the rules would take effect in 2022, later than previous expectations for 2019.

The dollar rose 0.2 per cent against a trade-weighted basket of its rivals on Friday and was on track for its biggest weekly rise in nearly six weeks after a potential government shutdown this weekend was averted.

Attention is likely to turn to U.S. jobs numbers due out later on Friday, particularly with a key Federal Reserve meeting due next week.

According to a Reuters survey of economists, the Labor Department’s closely watched employment report is likely to show that nonfarm payrolls rose by 200,000 jobs last month after surging 261,000 in October.

The report probably will have little impact on expectations that the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates at its December

12-13 policy meeting, but it could help shape the debate on monetary policy next year.

Wall Street futures pointed towards a higher open for US stocks.

Earlier on Friday, Asian shares rallied for a second session in a row as economic news from China and Japan beat all expectations.

Beijing reported exports surged 12.3 per cent in November from a year earlier, more than double the forecast, while imports climbed almost 18 percent.

Iron ore and copper imports enjoyed a stellar rebound, which could help stem a recent pullback in commodity prices.

Japan’s Nikkei led the way as the yen eased on the dollar, rising 1.1 per cent on top of Thursday’s 1.45 per cent bounce to be almost back where it started the week.

Revised data showed Japan’s economy growing twice as fast as first thought as business spending jumped.

Gold inched higher to $1,247.40 (Dh4,581.70), having this week breached its recent tight trading range to hit a four-month trough at $1,245.60.

Oil prices rose, helped by rising Chinese demand and as a threatened strike by oil workers in Nigeria prompted short covering.

Brent futures were up 0.7 per cent at $62.91 a barrel, having climbed 98 cents overnight. US crude was up 71 cents at $57.40.