
The US dollar remains sluggish after experiencing intense pressure following the Fed's decision to cut interest rates by 25 bps. The US Dollar Index (DXY) remains in the lower zone and is trending lower weekly, as market participants assess the Fed's policy stance as being more dovish. Expectations of further interest rate cuts have diminished the dollar's appeal as a high-yielding asset, leading to more capital flows into other assets such as gold, silver, and some riskier currencies. Nevertheless, in the very short term, the dollar attempted a slight rebound in the US session as US bond...
The Nikkei 225 rose 281 points, or 0.7%, to 38,976 in early trade on Monday, bouncing back from the previous session's losses amid a significant rise in U.S. futures as weaker U.S. inflation data revived hopes for potential policy easing next year. The broader Topix index rose 15 points, or about 0.6%, reversing losses in the previous session, buoyed by relief that Washington managed to avoid a government shutdown. At home, the Bank of Japan last week kept its key short-term interest rate at around 0.25%, in line with market expectations, as the central bank needed more time to assess...
Asian stocks rose after the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge came in below expectations, rekindling bets of a rate cut. The dollar was steady. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index snapped a six-day slide, with indexes in Australia, Japan and South Korea up about 0.5%. Futures in Hong Kong pointed to gains. U.S. equity contracts rose after the S&P 500 Index rose 1.1% on Friday, as personal consumption spending rose at its slowest pace since May. Monday's gains will provide some relief to global markets after stocks suffered their worst weekly decline in more than three months as a...
The Hang Seng Index fell for a second day, down 0.2%, or 31.81, to 19,720.70 in Hong Kong. Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. contributed the most to the index's decline, dropping 3.4%. Kuaishou Technology was the biggest decliner, down 5.4%. For the day, 48 of 83 stocks fell, while 29 rose; three of four sectors fell, led by financials. Source: Bloomberg
European markets opened lower on Friday as investors monitored political turmoil in the US and monetary policy decisions from major economies. The United States was plunged into fresh political uncertainty late Thursday, after the failure of a Trump-backed spending bill that would have averted a government shutdown. Dozens of Republican lawmakers voted against a deal to fund the government for three months and suspend the US debt ceiling for two years, meaning a partial government shutdown will begin on Friday night. Elsewhere, China kept its key interest rate steady on Friday, in line...
The Nikkei 225 Index dropped 0.29% to close at 38,702, while the broader Topix Index fell 0.44% to 2,702 on Friday, marking the sixth consecutive session of losses as investors reacted to stronger-than-expected inflation data. Japan's headline inflation rate rose to a three-month high of 2.9% in November, up from 2.3% in October, while the core inflation rate increased to 2.7%, surpassing market expectations of 2.6%. These figures support a hawkish outlook for Bank of Japan (BOJ) monetary policy. However, the BOJ chose to keep rates unchanged at its December meeting, citing the need to...
Japanese shares are rising slightly on Friday as the yen's weakening on dovish signals from the Bank of Japan supported export-related sectors such as automakers, steel producers and shippers. The Topix Index rose 0.2% to 2,719.63 as of 9:30 a.m. Tokyo time The Nikkei advanced 0.2% to 38,880.21 Toyota Motor Corp. contributed the most to the Topix Index's gain, increasing 2.8%. Out of 2,126 stocks in the index, 1,195 rose and 775 fell, while 156 were unchanged. With key domestic and overseas monetary policy events out of the way, domestic demand-linked...
The Dow Jones Industrial Average was higher Thursday, rebounding from its 10th straight loss.The 30-stock Dow added 164 points, or 0.3%. The S&P 500gained 0.3%, alongside the Nasdaq CompositeShares of artificial intelligence darling Nvidia which weighed down the Dow in the previous session, traded 2% higher. Gains in financial stocks, including JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America led the recovery in equities Thursday alongside industrials, health care and utilities. Stocks plunged Wednesday after the Federal Reserve struck a heavy blow against the roaring bull market, signaling that it...
European markets fell sharply at the open on Thursday, following global markets lower after the U.S. Federal Reserve hinted yesterday that a small rate cut was imminent. The pan-European Stoxx 600 fell 1.26% shortly after the start of trading, with all sectors in negative territory. The lower open in Europe was anticipated following a sell-off on Wall Street on Wednesday after the Fed, which cut its overnight lending rate by 25 basis points to a target range of 4.25% to 4.5%, signaled there would likely be only two rate cuts in 2025, instead of the four cuts it had previously...
Gold rises in the early Asian trade. There's a broad commodities uptrend, driven by macro uncertainty, a weaker dollar, and persistent demand for "hard" assets, says Fawad Razaqzada, market analyst...
Oil extended declines after OPEC+ agreed to a bigger-than-expected production increase next month, raising concerns about oversupply just as US tariffs fan fears about the demand outlook.
Brent...
The Japanese Yen (JPY) weakened against its US counterpart and reversed part of Friday's recovery from the lowest level since July 23 following Bank of Japan (BOJ) Governor Kazuo Ueda's remarks....