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Global stocks, dollar diverge before key US inflation data

Published : Thursday, 12 September, 2024 at 12:00 AM  Count : 96
LONDON, Sept 11: Major stock markets and the dollar diverged Wednesday before US inflation data that could help indicate the size of an expected interest-rate cut from the Federal Reserve next week.

In Europe, London's share-price gains were capped in midday deals by official data showing Britain's economy stalled in July.

Paris and Frankfurt grew by bigger amounts as investors in the eurozone geared up for the European Central Bank's interest-rate decision Thursday.

Asia's main equity indices closed lower with a strong yen weighing on Tokyo's market, while Chinese stocks were knocked by concerns over China's struggling economy, analysts said.

The US consumer price index later in the day will be pored over for an insight into the Fed's rate decision on September 18 and what it could mean for the global economy.

"The die has been cast for a rate cut by the Fed next week," Mark Zandi at Moody's Analytics told AFP.

Wednesday's inflation print "would have to be well above the current consensus... to dissuade the Fed not to ease" by 25 basis points.

"While a 50 basis-points cut is possible, it is less than likely, regardless of the CPI print, as the Fed would cut that much only if something in the economy or financial system was going off the rails. That isn't happening," Zandi added.

The Fed is expected to cut borrowing costs for the first time since inflation rocketed and then fell in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

The European Central Bank is expected to reduce eurozone interest rates again on Thursday.

Elsewhere Wednesday, the yen hit a nine-month high after a Bank of Japan official hinted at more monetary tightening.

The Japanese unit was boosted also by bets on a Kamala Harris presidency after she was considered to have come out on top in her US presidential debate with Donald Trump and following her endorsement by superstar Taylor Swift.

The chances of Trump losing weighed on bitcoin after he had previously vowed to be a "pro-bitcoin president" if elected in November.

Another round of subpar US jobs data last week revived worries that the world's top economy was slowing more than expected and could be on course for a recession. 

Investor uncertainty over the United States is compounded by the struggles of China's economy, as leaders there try to kickstart growth in the face of a crisis in the huge property sector, tepid consumer activity and soaring youth unemployment.

Oil prices recovered in part after a hammering Tuesday, when Brent North Sea crude slid below $70 per barrel for the first time since December 2021 on concerns about the global outlook.

Crude futures were hit also by the OPEC oil cartel revising down its demand estimates.    —AFP



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