São Paulo's stock exchange, the Bovespa, shot up with Brazilian investors showing renewed enthusiasm with the economic decisions made in Washington and Wall Street. At the end of the day, the stock exchange's main index, the Ibovespa, had gone up 9.4%, closing at 34,188 points. 3.5 billion reais (US$ 1.5 billion) were negotiated.
Among the biggest winners were companies from the financial sector such as Unibanco and Itaú, which went up more than 15%. State-controlled oil multinational Petrobras and mining giant Vale, the two most traded stocks, also had a banner day gaining more than 14% in one day.
Meanwhile, the dollar fell heavily ending the day at 2.325 reais per dollar, a 5.41% slump. Brazil's Banco Central contributed to the fall by intervening in the exchange market. Brazil's monetary authority sold US$ 2.16 billion dollars in two swap auctions.
Argentina's Merval jumped 8.79%, the highest increase since October 14, helping to cut into last week's five days running losses of 18.95%.
In Chile the stock market reaction was more modest, 2%, but the Chilean peso made a strong recovery against the US dollar, as happened with the Brazilian real and the Mexican peso.
Monday's rally was marked by London's FTSE 100 Index of leading shares which soared by a record 9.8% or 372.1 points at 4153, the biggest percentage gain in its history. In Paris, the CAC 40 index jumped 10.1% and in Frankfurt the DAX advanced 10.3%.
On Wall Street, the key Dow Jones added almost 5% and the Nasdaq index gained 6% and S&P 6.74%, extending the rally seen on Friday.
Shares in Citigroup have jumped by almost 60% as investors welcomed the US government's rescue plan for the bank. The US Treasury is set to invest US$ 20 billion in return for preferred shares in the troubled banking giant.
In Britain, the government announced a stimulus plan that has temporarily cut VAT from 17.5% to 15% as part of a 20 billion-pound package aimed at kick-starting the economy.
Energy stocks also got a boost as the price of crude oil surged towards US$ 55 a barrel.
Mercopress/Bzz