European markets opened on the front foot again, looking for their 10th straight week of gains after last week's bumper set of easing measures from the European Central Bank.
Asian stocks earlier touched their highest levels in nearly three years while Wall Street notched another record close on Friday following bright US jobs data.
MSCI's All-World share index, which encompasses 45 countries and is generally seen as benchmark of global stocks, was up 0.15 per cent at 427.11 points, just below its 2007 pre-financial crisis peak of 428.63 points.
Trading was thinner than usual due to public holidays in a handful of countries including Germany and France, but the strong appetite for risk in the region was hard to miss.
Spanish and Italian bond yields, a proxy for what their governments pay to borrow on financial markets, were at all-time lows with Spain enjoying lower yields than the US.
Emerging demand
Emerging markets were also performing strongly with stocks on the cusp of a one-year high and a number of key currencies on the rise.
The South Korean won touched a near six-year peak although intervention by the foreign exchange authorities capped its upside, while Malaysia's ringgit hit a near seven-month high.
Among major currencies, the dollar continued to benefit from rising US Treasury yields, after US jobs data on Friday showed employment back at its pre-recession level.
Weekend trade data from China also supported the view of a recovering global economy, with exports gaining steam last month. But the same data also contained some cause for concern, as a surprising drop in imports could herald weaker domestic demand.
China's yuan rose after the People's Bank of China unexpectedly fixed its daily midpoint higher against the dollar for the second straight session, which in turn also gave a lift to other Asian currencies.
The yield on benchmark 10-year Treasuries stood at 2.6076 per cent, up from Friday's US close of 2.597 per cent and well above 11-month lows plumbed last month.
For now, the dollar had to be content with a slight gain on the day to buy 102.44 yen, getting some help early in the Asian session from Japanese current account data which saw a lower-than-expected surplus in April.
In commodities, US crude and Brent oil gained about 0.3 and 0.2 per cent to $103.02 and $108.83 a barrel respectively, underpinned by the solid jobs report that in theory should translate to higher oil demand.
Spot gold was steady on the day at $1,252.95 an ounce, while Shanghai copper fell to its lowest in nearly a month and London copper also dropped, unsettled by concern that a probe into metals storage at China's third-largest port could squeeze financing and buying in metals.