
US stocks moved lower on Friday, with the S&P 500 down 1% and the Nasdaq falling 1.6%, both hitting one-month lows, while the Dow Jones dropped about 400 points. The tech sector remained under heavy pressure as investors grew increasingly concerned about stretched valuations in AI-related stocks and the risk of a bubble. Concerns also mounted that the Fed may hesitate to cut rates next month, after several policymakers expressed skepticism about the need for another reduction. Market odds of a 25 bps cut in December have fallen to just below 50%, down from nearly 65% earlier in the...
Strong evidence of a cooling US labor market rippled through Wall Street, spurring a rally in bonds as traders boosted their bets the Federal Reserve will cut rates in December. A slide in megacaps dragged down stocks. With the scarcity of data caused by the federal shutdown, investors have turned to private readings such as the Challenger, Gray & Christmas Inc. report showing companies announced the most job cuts for any October in over 20 years. Following the numbers, money markets now imply an about 60% chance of a...
The Hang Seng Index rose 2.1% at 26,485.90 in Hong Kong. The move was the biggest since rising 2.4% on Oct. 20 and follows the previous session's decrease of 0.1%. Today, commerce and industry stocks led the market higher, as all sectors gained; 83 of 88 shares rose, while 4 fell. Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. contributed the most to the index gain, increasing 4.1%. China Hongqiao Group Ltd. had the largest increase, rising 9.9%. Source : Bloomberg
European stocks opened lower on Thursday, as investors reacted to another flurry of corporate earnings. The pan-European Stoxx 600 was 0.3% lower 20 minutes into the session, with most sectors and major bourses in negative territory. France's CAC 40 led losses among major regional indexes, with a decline of 0.7%. It's a busy day for earnings with third-quarter reports due from a slew of regional companies. AstraZeneca CEO: ‘We decided to be cautious' AstraZeneca held its guidance steady on Thursday morning, after reporting better-than-expected third-quarter revenues and profit. Total...
The Nikkei 225 index closed up 1.34% to 50,883.68 on Thursday (November 6th), helped by solid US data: the ISM services index hit an eight-month high and the ADP added 42,000 jobs. Sentiment improved after valuation concerns eased, although the market now sees the chance of a Fed rate cut in December down to around 60% from 70% at the start of the week. Domestically, Japan's Services PMI remained in expansion at 53.1, while the composite PMI was at 51.5, and cash wages rose 1.9%, driven by a surge in bonuses. Corporate news: Nissan targets record profits from its headquarters sale-leaseback...
Asian markets opened higher, following Wall Street's rebound. The Nikkei and Kospi jumped around 1% at the open, while US stock futures fluctuated after the Nasdaq 100 rose 0.7% and the S&P 500 gained 0.4%. In the bond market, the 10-year US Treasury yield held steady at around 4.15%. Oil stabilized after two days of declines, and shares of several US retailers rose as a US Supreme Court appearance that appeared skeptical of broad tariffs raised hopes that tariffs could be lifted. The return of buyers came after a brief decline that fueled concerns about overvaluation. Private data...