
Oil prices stabilized on Thursday (February 12th), as the market reassigned a risk premium to US-Iran tensions despite US inventory data showing swelling domestic supplies. This movement confirms one thing: geopolitical headlines are still more "noise" than signals of a short-term surplus. As of 3:50 PM WIB, Brent was at $69.60/barrel (+0.29%) and WTI was at $64.83/barrel (+0.31%). The gains were moderate, but enough to keep prices near the psychological $70 level for Brent. From a geopolitical perspective, market focus is on the potential for escalation in the Middle East. Recent reports...
Japanese stocks fell after the close on Thursday, as losses in the Insurance, Financial Services and Mining sectors led shares lower. At the close in Tokyo, the Nikkei 225 was down 0.87%. The best performers on the Nikkei 225 were Chugai Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. (TYO:4519), which rose 3.53% or 237.00 points to trade at 6,954.00 at the close. Meanwhile, DIC Corp. (TYO:4631) gained 2.77% or 95.00 points to close at 3,520.00 and Nintendo Co Ltd. (TYO:7974) gained 2.43% or 216.00 points to 9,119.00 in late trade. The worst performers on the session were Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha, Ltd. (TYO:9107),...
The Hang Seng dipped 168 points or 0.9% to close at 19,280 on Wednesday, falling for the third straight session and touching a six-week low as losses spread across sectors. Risk-averse sentiment prevailed as traders grappled with uncertainty over US interest rates and policies under incoming President Trump. Caution also persisted ahead of the March National People's Congress in China, with investors expecting limited policy action in the interim. Meanwhile, Chinese officials criticized Washington's decision this week to blacklist some tech firms from China over alleged military ties....
Asia-Pacific markets tumbled Thursday following a choppy session on Wall Street as the Federal Reserve meeting minutes signaled interest rates could stay higher for longer due to sticky inflation. Investors in Asia also await China's inflation data for December. Economists polled by Reuters expect growth in consumer prices to have remained near zero, while producer prices are estimated to have continued to slide.Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 slipped 0.14% and the Topix fell 0.29%.Australia's S&P/ASX 200 edged down 0.63%.South Korea's Kospi index fell 0.1%, while the small-cap Kosdaq slid...
U.S. stocks ended Wednesday little changed, as major indexes failed to stray frar from the unchanged mark, with investors digesting the impact of two conflicting sets of jobs data and a report that said President-elect Donald Trump was mulling a national economic emergency declaration on inflation. The minutes of the Federal Reserve's Dec. 17-18 meeting showed on Wednesday that officials saw a rising risk that price pressures may remain sticky as policymakers began wrestling with the impact of policies expected from the incoming Trump administration. Market sentiment was fragile after a...
European markets closed lower Wednesday after regional economic sentiment dropped in December, according to preliminary data. The pan-European Stoxx 600 index ended the session down 0.27%, having traded higher for most of the morning session. Most major bourses and the majority of sectors also closed the day in negative territory, with healthcare, financial services and media stocks among the few in the green. The downturn came after the European Commission released preliminary data showing its economic sentiment indicator had dropped 1.7 points in the EU and 1.9 points in the euro area...
Wall Street's major indexes opened weak on Wednesday, as investors digested weaker-than-expected jobs data and assessed a report that President-elect Donald Trump is considering declaring a national economic emergency. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI), rose 13.7 points, or 0.03%, at the open to 42,542.1. The S&P 500 (.SPX), gained 1.6 points, or 0.03%, to 5,910.66, while the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC), fell 20.3 points, or 0.10%, to 19,469.365. Source: Reuters
The Hang Seng plunged 168 points, or 0.9%, to close at 19,280 on Wednesday, falling for a third straight session and hitting a six-week low as losses spread across sectors. Risk-off sentiment prevailed as traders grappled with uncertainty over U.S. interest rates and policy under incoming President Trump. Caution also persisted ahead of China's March National People's Congress, with investors expecting limited policy action for the time being. Meanwhile, Chinese officials criticized Washington's decision this week to blacklist several Chinese technology companies over alleged military...
European markets opened slightly higher on Wednesday as traders assessed the region's economic outlook. The pan-European Stoxx 600 index opened 0.1% higher with most sectors in positive territory, with financial services stocks up nearly 1%. The worst-performing sector was autos. Traders will be watching data on European consumer confidence and economic sentiment. On the earnings front, Shell will release its fourth-quarter update. European markets closed higher on Tuesday as investors in the region digested the latest inflation data showing euro zone consumer prices rose to 2.4% in...
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....