The Hang Seng Index opened lower by 63 points, or 0.24%, to 25,718, followed by the H-Share Index, which fell 0.34%, and the Technology Index, which fell 0.67%. This decline was driven by the decline in major technology stocks such as Tencent, Meituan, Xiaomi, JD.com, and Kuaishou, which all fell between 0.4% and 1%. Alibaba was the only major stock in this sector to remain stable. In the financial sector, stock movements were more mixed. HSBC Holdings and AIA Group recorded small gains of 0.1% and 0.2%, respectively, while Ping An and the Hong Kong Stock Exchange weakened slightly....
The US dollar edged higher against the slightly weaker Swiss franc, as an unexpected contraction in Swiss consumer prices in August fueled speculation that the SNB will cut interest rates to negative levels in the coming months. The pair edged up from Wednesday's low of 0.8025, but remains trapped in a tight range below the 0.8060-0.8070 area. Investors are cautious about placing large dollar bets ahead of key US fundamental data releases. Swiss inflation remained stable, growing at an annual rate of 0.2% in August, unchanged from the previous month. However, monthly inflation contracted...
The EUR/USD pair traded slightly lower at 1.1650 at the opening of the European session on Thursday (September 4th). The pair continues to search for direction, not far from the lower end of its trading range over the past few weeks, ahead of the Eurozone Retail Sales report. However, the main focus is on the US ADP Employment Change, due today, and, especially, the US Nonfarm Payrolls report on Friday. On Wednesday, weak US JOLTS Job Openings data added to evidence of a weak labor market and raised expectations of an imminent Federal Reserve (Fed) interest rate cut. This view was confirmed...
Silver slipped 1% to around $40.7 per ounce on Thursday, easing from 14-year highs as investors locked in profits ahead of key US labor market releases. Precious metals have rallied in recent weeks as traders increased bets on Federal Reserve rate cuts, with markets pricing in nearly a 98% chance of a 25 basis point reduction this month. On Wednesday, data showed US job openings fell more than expected to 7.181 million in July. Attention now turns to the ADP private payrolls and weekly jobless claims due later today, followed by the August jobs report on Friday. Safe-haven demand also lent...
The Australian dollar was little changed to around $0.654 on Thursday, holding its recent gains, supported by stronger-than-expected trade balance figures. Australia's goods trade surplus widened to AUD 7.31 billion in July, the largest in 17 months and well above expectations of AUD 5.0 billion. The improvement was driven by a 3.3% rise in exports to a 21-month high of AUD 46.02 billion, following strong gains in June, while imports fell 1.3% to AUD 38.71 billion, weighed by softer demand for non-monetary gold. The Aussie also drew support from recent data showing upbeat Q2 GDP growth,...
Oil steadied after falling by the most in a month as traders fretted that OPEC+ may boost supplies, US data pointed to a slowdown, and an industry estimate showed higher stockpiles at a key storage hub. West Texas Intermediate traded near $63 a barrel, after global benchmark Brent closed below $68. Prices slumped on Wednesday after a report that the OPEC+ alliance will consider a fresh round of production increases at a policy meeting this weekend. Still, Saudi Arabia and its partners have yet to decide how to proceed, according to several delegates. In the US, the world's...