*
Europe's STOXX down 1%, U.S. futures dip on dour earnings
*
U.S. data due later in week could offer direction
*
Yen hits seven-week high, rate hike in the balance
(Updates at 0815 GMT)
By Lawrence White
LONDON, July 24 (Reuters) - Stocks sagged worldwide on
Wednesday as earnings from Tesla, Alphabet as well as European
luxury brands disappointed, while the yen surged to a seven-week
high ahead of a central bank meeting next week.
The U.S. dollar was broadly steady, with traders watching
out for an inflation reading on Friday and a Federal Reserve
meeting next week.
The pan-European STOXX 600 index slipped 0.8% to
512.3 points as of 0800 GMT. That was led by a 2% slump in the
personal and household goods sector after the world's
biggest luxury group LVMH reported slower sales growth
as Chinese shoppers rein in their spending.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan
lost 0.4%, while Japan's Nikkei fell 1%.
The dour mood looked set to continue in the United States.
Nasdaq futures slid 1% and S&P 500 futures were 0.7%
lower after Tesla reported its smallest profit margin
in more than five years, weighing on other EV stocks.
"The interim results season is kicking off on both sides of
the Atlantic and, so far, investors are underwhelmed by what
they have seen," said Steve Clayton, head of equity funds,
Hargreaves Lansdown.
Shares of Google-parent Alphabet slipped in
after-hours trade even as the firm beat revenue and profit
targets.
"Investors queried whether the vast sums being invested into
Google's AI capabilities were actually earning a return,"
Clayton said.
Subdued stock trading globally was symptomatic of markets
looking for direction, with traders digesting a range of themes
including the U.S. election, expectations of rate cuts, and weak
corporate earnings reports.
U.S. GDP data on Thursday and personal consumption
expenditure data - the Fed's favoured measure of inflation - on
Friday could help investors calibrate their expectations of when
interest rates might be cut.
Markets are pricing in 62 basis points of easing this year,
with a cut in September priced in at 95%, the CME FedWatch tool
showed.
A growing majority of economists in a Reuters poll said the
Fed will likely cut rates twice this year, in September and
December, as resilient U.S. consumer demand warrants a cautious
approach despite easing inflation.
"The U.S. consumer has remained extremely strong ... but
you're starting to see a degree of fragility underlying some of
the data," said Luke Browne, head of asset allocation for Asia
at Manulife Investment Management.
YEN RIDE
The yen spiked to its highest in seven weeks of
154.36 per dollar after surging nearly 1% on Tuesday, having
languished near a 38-year low of 161.96 at the start of the
month. It was last up 0.56% at 154.73.
Traders are focused on a Bank of Japan meeting next week,
where a 10 basis point hike is priced at a 44% chance.
Traders suspect Tokyo intervened in the currency market in
early July to yank the yen higher, with estimates from BOJ data
indicating authorities may have spent roughly 6 trillion yen
($38 billion).
The suspected bouts of intervention have led speculators to
unwind popular and profitable carry trades, in which traders
borrow the yen at low rates to invest in dollar-priced assets
for a higher return.
The yen was higher against other currencies too, touching a
more than one-month highs against the pound and the
euro and a two-month high against the Australian
dollar.
The dollar index, which measures the U.S. currency
against six rivals, was little changed at 104.53. The index is
down 1.3% this month.
In commodities, oil prices rose on easing U.S. crude
inventories. Brent crude futures for September rose
0.51% to $81.52 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate
crude for September gained 0.65% to $77.46 per barrel.
($1 = 155.3600 yen)