
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...
The Nikkei 225 and Topix indexes showed limited movement on Monday, as global political instability weighed on financial markets. Ongoing political crises in South Korea and France, along with the collapse of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's regime, contributed to the uncertainty. Domestically, Japan's third-quarter economic growth was revised upward, indicating the country's second consecutive quarter of expansion. Investors are now awaiting business sentiment data later in the week to further assess the health of the economy. Notable declines were seen in index heavyweights such as...
Asian stocks started the week on a weak note, as investors grappled with South Korea's political upheaval and awaited fresh stimulus from Beijing. Oil prices steadied after Syria's government was toppled. Korean equity benchmarks fell as much as 1.8% at the open, with Australian shares also down. Japanese shares were flat. Futures pointed to a weak open in Hong Kong. The dollar and 10-year Treasury yields were steady. Investors are bracing themselves this week for a series of central bank decisions on four continents, a key meeting of Chinese officials and U.S. inflation data in a bid to...
he Nasdaq and the S&P 500 rose to record closing highs on Friday following upbeat forecasts from Lululemon Athletica and other companies and as U.S. jobs data fueled expectations the Federal Reserve would cut interest rates this month. The Dow finished lower, as a drop in UnitedHealth Group (UNH.N), shares weighed on the index. The S&P 500 consumer discretionary index (.SPLRCD), led gains among sectors, boosted by Lululemon. Shares of Lululemon Athletica (LULU.O), jumped after the sportswear maker increased full-year forecasts. Also in the consumer discretionary space, shares of...
Wall Street's main indexes opened higher on Friday as traders increased bets on a Federal Reserve rate cut this month after the November payrolls report. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI), opens new tab rose 58.6 points, or 0.13%, at the open to 44,824.29. The S&P 500 (.SPX), opens new tab rose 6.3 points, or 0.10%, at the open to 6,081.38, while the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC), opens new tab rose 43.2 points, or 0.22%, to 19,743.959 at the opening bell. Source: Reuters
The Hang Seng Index jumped 305 points, or 1.6%, to close at 19,866 on Friday (6/12) after a weak session the previous day, supported by strong gains across all sectors. The index rose 2.3% weekly, rising for a second straight period, amid hopes of fresh stimulus from a key policy meeting in China next week that could set economic targets for 2025. Traders eagerly added new positions after Beijing published draft rules on Thursday offering incentives for government agencies to buy Chinese-made products. Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley said the PBoC will cut its main policy rate...
The Nikkei 225 index fell 0.77% to close at 39,091 while the broader Topix index dropped 0.55% to 2,727 on Friday, paring gains from earlier in the week and tracking losses on Wall Street overnight as a major rally in U.S. stocks lost momentum. Investors are also gearing up for the crucial U.S. monthly jobs report. In Japan, data showed that inflation-adjusted real wages were unchanged in October from a year earlier, up from a 0.4% decline in September and 0.8% in August. That supported expectations for a potential interest rate hike by the Bank of Japan this month, although uncertainty...
European equity markets are set for a lower open on Friday, as political turmoil in France dampened market sentiment. French President Emmanuel Macron delivered a speech criticizing politicians for failing to take voters' concerns into account, after a motion backed by both left- and right-leaning lawmakers led to the collapse of Prime Minister Michel Barnier's minority government. Investors also await the third reading of Eurozone GDP for the third quarter, alongside French trade figures and Italian retail sales data for October. Meanwhile, traders are bracing for a crucial U.S. jobs...
Hong Kong stocks jumped 233 points, or 1.2%, to 19,789 in early trade on Friday, bouncing back from a weak session the previous day amid optimism that China's central bank will ease monetary policy further next year to support growth and fight deflation. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley expect the PBOC to cut its key policy rate by 40bps in 2025, the biggest rate cut in a decade. The Hang Seng is on track for a second straight weekly gain, up nearly 2% so far, buoyed by hopes of a positive outcome from the upcoming central economic work forum and Politburo meeting in China. However,...
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....