US stocks were little changed on Tuesday, with the three major indexes hovering around the flatline as investors adopted a cautious stance ahead of a potential government shutdown that could disrupt the release of key labor data later this week. The government faces the risk of shutting down tomorrow if Democrats and Republicans fail to reach a deal today, putting Friday's payrolls report at risk. Traders also awaited the JOLTS job openings data due later in the day. Energy and communication services were the worst performing sectors while utilities outperformed. Microsoft (-0.6%), Amazon...
Japanese stocks weakened after the close of trading on Wednesday (August 20th), as weakness in the Paper & Pulp, Transportation, and Communications sectors led to declines. At the close of trading in Tokyo, the Nikkei 225 fell 1.42%. The best-performing stocks on the Nikkei 225 were Pacific Metals Co., Ltd. (TYO:5541), which rose 4.89% or 91.00 points to trade at 1,953.00. Meanwhile, Oriental Land Co. Ltd. (TYO:4661) rose 4.47% or 157.00 points to close at 3,672.00, and Keisei Electric Railway Co., Ltd. (TYO:4661) rose 4.47% or 157.00 points to close at 3,672.00. (TYO:9009) rose 3.96%,...
Equities in Hong Kong dropped 105 points or 0.4% to 25,019 in Wednesday morning trade, slipping for the fifth session after a tech-led selloff on Wall Street ahead of the Fed's July meeting minutes and the Jackson Hole meeting. Sentiment remained fragile after Tuesday's data showed China's youth unemployment hit an 11-month high of 17.8% in July, with weak demand in tech, real estate, and education sectors. Losses were contained by the PBoC's move to keep key lending rates at record lows, in line with consensus, as Beijing sought to bolster liquidity and counter disinflation. Meanwhile,...
Japanese equities fell on Wednesday after the country saw its steepest export drop in over four years. Exports fell 2.6% in July as US tariffs weighed on global commerce, the Ministry of Finance reported Wednesday. The Nikkei 225 fell 145.63 points to open at 43,400.66, tracking a sharp retreat on Wall Street led by heavyweight technology shares. Investor confidence wavered over concerns that the tech rally had advanced too far, with all eyes on the upcoming Jackson Hole symposium for clues on interest rates. Concurrently, the US announced plans to increase scrutiny of imports from...
US stocks fell on Tuesday as losses in major technology names dragged the market lower, with the S&P 500 slipping 0.6% and the Nasdaq falling 1.5%, its lowest level in more than two weeks, on steep drops in chipmakers. The Dow Jones finished muted after briefly hitting a record high earlier in the day. Nvidia slid 3.5%, AMD tumbled 5.4%, and Broadcom fell 3.6%, while Palantir plunged 9.3%, making it the weakest performer in the S&P 500. On the upside, Home Depot gained 3.2% despite missing earnings expectations, supported by signs of firming demand in the housing sector. Intel...
European stocks rose Tuesday, with investors digesting the meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky in Washington. The DAX index in Germany gained 0.5%, the CAC 40 in France rose 1.2% and the FTSE 100 in the U.K. increased 0.4%. Rising peace optimism Sentiment received a boost Tuesday after a meeting between the presidents of the U.S. and Ukraine ended relatively positively, with both sides hopeful of the future. Trump said that the U.S. would help guarantee Ukraine's security, but did not specify the terms of any guarantees. He also raised the...