European Shares Seen Broadly Higher As Recession Worries Ease

RTTNews | 805 days ago
European Shares Seen Broadly Higher As Recession Worries Ease

(RTTNews) - European stocks are seen opening broadly higher on Friday as fears of a U.S. recession eased.

The dollar index weakened and the 10-year U.S. Treasury yields plummeted to 3.81 percent, reflecting expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve will opt for small rate hikes from December.

While traders now price in a 50-bps point hike at the Fed's policy meet in December, upcoming economic data will likely shape how long officials keep raising rates beyond December.

Asian markets followed Wall Street higher, with benchmark indexes in Australia, South Korea, Japan and Hong Kong climbing 3-5 percent.

Gold traded slightly lower after rallying nearly 3 percent on Thursday to a more than two-month high.

Oil edged up slightly, with concerns over China's zero-COVID policy and strict lockdowns capping the upside.

China today reported 10,535 new locally transmitted cases for Nov. 10, the highest since April 29.

Cities such as Beijing, Zhengzhou, and Chongqing have stepped up lockdowns and other curbs as daily cases hit record highs.

Quarterly national accounts, industrial output and foreign trade figures are due from the U.K. later in the session, headlining a light day for the European economic news.

Destatis is scheduled to issue Germany's final consumer prices for October. Inflation is expected to rise to 10.4 percent, as initially estimated, from 10.0 percent in September.

Across the Atlantic, a report on consumer sentiment may sway sentiment.

U.S. stocks rose the most in more than two and a half years overnight, the dollar tumbled and the yield on the two-year Treasury note saw its biggest drop since October 2008, as weak inflation data raised hopes of Fed easing and a soft landing for the economy.

U.S. consumer inflation rose 0.4 percent in October, pushing the annual increase below 8 percent for the first time in eight months, data showed.

The Dow jumped 3.7 percent to reach its best closing level in almost three months and the S&P 500 soared 5.5 percent to hit a two-month closing high while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite skyrocketed 7.4 percent.

European stocks logged an 11-week closing high amid bets that U.S. inflation has peaked and the Federal Reserve would soon start scaling down the size of interest-rate hikes.

The pan-European STOXX 600 climbed 2.8 percent to log its biggest percentage gain in five weeks. The German DAX spiked 3.5 percent, France's CAC 40 index surged 2 percent and the U.K.'s FTSE 100 added 1.1 percent.

read more
Swiss Market Ends Marginally Up

Swiss Market Ends Marginally Up

The Switzerland market closed marginally up on Friday after staying in a tight band above the flat line right through the day's trading session. Investors continued to assess recent economic data and U.S. President Donald Trump's remarks about potential new tariffs and call for interest rate cuts.
RTTNews | 6h 1min ago
European Stocks Fail To Hold Early Gains, Close Flat

European Stocks Fail To Hold Early Gains, Close Flat

European stocks closed on a mixed note on Friday, taking a breather of sorts, after recent strong gains amid optimism about further monetary easing by global central banks. Worries about tariff threats eased a bit, but not fully, and investors largely chose to refrain from making significant moves.
RTTNews | 6h 18min ago
Pound Higher After Strong U.K. PMI Data

Pound Higher After Strong U.K. PMI Data

The pound strengthened against its major counterparts in the New York session on Friday, as the nation's private sector activity expanded at the fastest pace in three months in January.
RTTNews | 8h 4min ago
U.S. Consumer Sentiment Deteriorates More Than Previously Estimated In January

U.S. Consumer Sentiment Deteriorates More Than Previously Estimated In January

Revised data released by the University of Michigan on Friday showed consumer sentiment in the U.S. unexpectedly deteriorated by more than previously estimated in the month of January. The University of Michigan said its consumer sentiment index for January was downwardly revised to 71.1 from the preliminary reading of 73.2. Economists had expected the index to be unrevised.
RTTNews | 9h 3min ago
Eurozone Private Sector Grows In January

Eurozone Private Sector Grows In January

Euro area private sector returned to growth in January as the contraction in manufacturing activity slowed and the services sector continued to expand, albeit at a slower pace, results of the purchasing managers' survey by S&P Global showed on Friday.
RTTNews | 9h 28min ago
U.S. Existing Home Sales Jump Much More Than Expected In December

U.S. Existing Home Sales Jump Much More Than Expected In December

A report released by the National Association of Realtors on Friday showed existing home sales in the U.S. jumped by much more than expected in the month of December. NAR said existing home sales shot up by 2.2 percent to an annual rate of 4.24 million in December after surging by 4.7 percent to a rate of 4.15 million in November.
RTTNews | 9h 37min ago
Bay Street Likely To Open On Mixed Note

Bay Street Likely To Open On Mixed Note

Canadian shares are likely to open on a mixed note on Friday, tracking fairly steady commodity prices, and reacting to U.S. President Donald Trump's threat that his administration will impose new tariffs on Canada and the European Union.
RTTNews | 12h 16min ago
Ericsson Q4 Results Rise, Hikes Dividend; But Stock Down

Ericsson Q4 Results Rise, Hikes Dividend; But Stock Down

Swedish telecom major LM Ericsson reported Friday higher fourth- quarter earnings and sales, with significant growth in North America, despite weak results in Asia, particularly India. Further, the company lifted quarterly dividend. Meanwhile, the shares were losing around 9 percent in Sweden as well as in pre-market activity on the Nasdaq.
RTTNews | 12h 19min ago