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Global stock markets mostly rise after tech rebound

Published : Thursday, 27 June, 2024 at 12:00 AM  Count : 75
LONDON, June 26: Asian and European markets mostly rose Wednesday following a tech-led bounce on Wall Street as investors prepared for the release of crucial US inflation data.

In foreign exchange, the yen fell back towards levels that have stirred intervention warnings from Japanese officials.

The euro also remained under pressure before weekend elections in France that polls suggest will see big wins for the far-right and left-wing parties pushing President Emmanuel Macrons centrists into third.

The Paris stock market was down 0.5 percent in midday deals. Eurozone peer Frankfurt was up 0.2 percent despite a key survey showing German consumers are feeling more pessimistic heading into July, rattled by stubborn inflation and economic uncertainty.

The forward-looking survey published by pollsters GfK and the Nuremberg Institute for Market Decisions (NIM) dipped by 0.8 points to minus 21.8 points compared to a month earlier.

Outside the eurozone, Londons stock market gained 0.1 percent approaching the half-way stage.

"Fears of a big imminent market wobble are now receding," noted Susannah Streeter head of money and markets at Hargreaves Lansdown.

"However, there are still concerns hanging around about stubborn inflation, with a hotter than expected reading in Australia sending the ASX 200 in Sydney lower."

Investors were awaiting the release Friday of US personal consumption expenditures index -- the Federal Reserves preferred gauge of inflation -- hoping a softer reading would allow the bank to cut interest rates soon.

The Feds so-called "dot plot" guide for rates points to one cut before January -- down from three predicted in March -- though there is much debate on whether it will make two, or even none at all.

Equity markets have been well supported this year by an expectation that officials will ease rates after a long-running campaign against sticky inflation.

However, the rally is showing signs of petering out owing to a string of data indicating the US economy and labour market remain strong, while investors are also concerned valuations may have gone too far, particularly among tech firms.

On Tuesday, the Nasdaq and S&P 500 both recovered from a recent sell-off thanks to a bounce in AI chip titan Nvidia from three days of heavy selling.

Asian markets mostly rose Wednesday after struggling in early trade.

Uncertainty over US rates was keeping the dollar elevated, with the yen in focus as it approaches the level that forced Japan to step into forex markets earlier this year.    —AFP



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