
Three major US indexes closed at new record highs after a lower-than-expected inflation report raised the possibility of a Federal Reserve interest rate cut later this year and prompted investors to shift to riskier assets. The S&P 500 rose 0.8%, the Nasdaq rose 1%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 470 points. Technology stocks led the rally, with AMD and IBM surging 7.5% and 8.77%, respectively, after IBM said it had successfully implemented a key quantum error correction algorithm on AMD chips, boosting sentiment across the sector. Intel rose 1.6% after returning to...
The Hang Seng tumbled 641 points, or 2.5%, to close at 25,247 on Friday, extending losses from the prior session and marking its lowest level in six weeks amid broad-based declines. Global sentiment soured after signs of credit stress at U.S. regional banks rattled investors, while renewed trade frictions between Washington and Beijing added pressure. All sectors fell, with tech sliding around 4%, followed by consumer, financial, and property stocks. Khoon Group hit a record low after certain sanctions by government authorities in the U.S. BYD lost 4.3% following its largest vehicle recall...
Both the STOXX 50 and the STOXX 600 fell 1.5% on Friday, tracking a global equity sell-off as signs of credit stress among US regional banks reignited concerns about credit quality and the potential spillover to other sectors. Banking and financial stocks came under heavy pressure, with notable declines in Intermediate Capital (-6.5%), Banco de Sabadell (-7.1%), Deutsche Bank (-6.3%), Barclays (-5.3%), Standard Chartered (-4.2%) and Société Générale (-4.5%). Meanwhile, escalating trade tensions between China and the US further weighed on sentiment. Beijing accused Washington of stoking...
Japanese stocks fell, led by the financial sector, as investors were shaken by revelations of loan problems at two regional US banks that raised concerns about the credit market. The Topix index fell 1% to 3,170.44 at the close of trading in Tokyo.Of the 1,672 stocks in the index, 446 rose and 1,169 fell, while 57 were unchanged. The Nikkei index fell 1.4% to 47,582.15, poised for its first weekly loss in eight weeks."Rather than focusing on specific sectors, it feels like we're seeing limited risk-off sentiment," said Tetsuo Seshimo, portfolio manager at Saison Asset Management. "Small...
Hong Kong stocks continued to weaken. The Hang Seng Index fell 1.3% to 25,555.02 at 10:14 a.m. local time, widening its weekly loss to 2.8%. Hang Seng Tech also fell 2.3%. The biggest pressure came from large caps: BYD Electronics -5.2%, SMIC -4.3%, Alibaba -2.7%, and Tencent -1.1%. In mainland China, the CSI 300 -1.3% and the Shanghai Composite -0.9%. After rallying more than 30% this year, sentiment has turned cautious. All eyes are on Monday's Chinese data releases: third-quarter GDP, retail sales, and industrial production. Economists' consensus forecasts GDP at ~4.7% (y/y), the slowest...
Asian stocks slipped at the open on Friday after risk sentiment faded on Wall Street, following news of bad debts at two US banks that heightened credit market concerns. US index futures also indicated further weakness. Japan, Australia, and South Korea all fell, in line with Wall Street's overnight slump: the S&P 500 fell 0.6% (financials -2.8%) and the Nasdaq 100 fell 0.4%. Hedging assets rallied: gold and silver hit record highs, while Treasury yields continued to fall—the 2-year yield to its lowest level since 2022 and the 10-year below 4%. The dollar index weakened, heading for its...