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Interest rate markets digest slowdown in US GDP growth
rate
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Mining sector M&A lifts FTSE to new all-time high
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Yen drops to latest 34-year low
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Graphic: World FX rates http://tmsnrt.rs/2egbfVh
(Updated at 11:02 a.m. ET (1502 GMT).)
By Chris Prentice and Marc Jones
NEW YORK/LONDON, April 25 (Reuters) - Stocks snapped a
three-day winning streak on Thursday as disappointing forecasts
from Facebook and Instagram owner Meta hammered the tech sector,
and Japan's yen sank through 155 per dollar for the first time
since 1990.
Tepid U.S. GDP data pushed Wall Street lower at its open,
and Meta's slump also soured the mood. More 'Big Tech'
earnings are scheduled for later in the day.
MSCI's gauge of stocks across the globe
fell 8.43 points, or 1.12%, to 750.92 by 11:02 a.m. ET (1502
GMT).
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 659.59 points
or 1.71% to 37,801.33, the S&P 500 lost 67.08 points or
1.32% to 5,004.55 and the Nasdaq Composite lost 263.34
points or 1.68% to 15,449.41.
In an earnings-packed week, tech bellwethers are in the
spotlight, with Alphabet, Microsoft ( MSFT ) and Intel ( INTC )
also due to report after Thursday's closing bell.
"If Meta is a guide, it seems the market is simply not
tolerant of in-line - if you've had a good run through Q1 & Q2
you either blow the lights out, or the market takes its pound of
flesh," said Chris Weston, head of research at Pepperstone.
Robert Alster, Chief Investment Officer at Close Brothers
Asset Management, also noted Mark Zuckerberg's comments on Meta
needing to spend to keep up in the AI arms race.
European earnings and M&A deals were flooding in too.
The STOXX 600 index fell 0.73% on mixed earnings.
London's FTSE 100 held onto gains, up 0.26% at a
record high as UK-listed miner Anglo American surged on
a $39 billion buyout offer from Australian rival BHP.
U.S. SLOWDOWN
Beyond corporate earnings, investors were digesting the
sharper-than-expected slowdown in first quarter U.S. economic
growth.
GDP increased at a 1.6% annualized rate, the Commerce
Department's Bureau of Economic Analysis said, largely supported
by consumer spending. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast
a brisker 2.4%.
"Despite the expected GDP slowdown in 2024, there are no
imminent signs of a recession," said Mutual of America Capital
Management's chairman and chief executive Stephen Rich.
Recent hotter-than-expected inflation reports have pushed
back and reduced expectations for Federal Reserve interest rate
cuts, with markets now pricing in roughly a 70% chance of a
first reduction in September. They are not even fully convinced
there will be another cut this year, having expected around six
cuts at the start of the year.
The shifting expectations of U.S. rates have lifted Treasury
yields and the dollar, casting a shadow on the currency market.
Against a basket of currencies, the dollar ticked
fractionally higher to 105.89 after the GDP data.
The Japanese yen weakened 0.14% against the greenback
at 155.55 per dollar, its lowest in 34 years. It is also now
firmly past the latest line in the sand traders had drawn for
Japan to intervene in the markets.
"Tokyo has still not intervened, and I reiterate that it
does look like there will be no intervention so long as
USD/JPY's climb continues in a relatively non-volatile fashion,"
said RBC Capital Markets' head of Asian FX strategy, Alvin Tan.
The Bank of Japan (BOJ) started its two-day rate-setting
meeting on Thursday, with expectations that it will keep its key
short-term interest rate target unchanged.
Attention will be on what BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda's says
about the yen's struggles.
Benchmark bond prices were lower after the U.S. data.
U.S. crude lost 0.65% to $82.27 a barrel and
Brent fell to $87.6 per barrel, down 0.48% on the day.
Spot gold added 0.7% to $2,332.04 an ounce.