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MORNING BID EUROPE-Nvidia delivers, but good no longer cuts it
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MORNING BID EUROPE-Nvidia delivers, but good no longer cuts it
Mar 11, 2026 5:39 AM

A look at the day ahead in European and global markets from Rae

Wee

With expectations riding so high for Nvidia ( NVDA ), even a

solid beat in its earnings did little to satisfy investors

chasing bigger returns on their artificial intelligence bets.

Shares of the world's most valuable company traded flat

after hours, reversing a short-lived bounce in the wake of its

results that showed January-quarter sales surpassed analyst

expectations and a forecast for current-quarter revenue above

market projections.

After all, with markets used to solid revenue beats from the

chipmaker for 14 successive quarters, Wednesday's outcome hardly

knocked the lights out.

At the very least, however, it put concern over AI-driven

market disruption and attendant costs on the back burner. Stocks

in Asia rose in a relief rally on Thursday, though U.S. and

European futures traded lower.

Investors have blown hot and cold on the AI trade in recent

weeks, worried about returns on investment and its potential to

upend entire industries, yet hesitant to sit on the sidelines.

Analysts have also said the AI boom is no longer going to be

the tide that lifts all boats.

Elsewhere, geopolitics continued to cast a cloud over

markets.

U.S. and Iranian negotiators are due to meet in Geneva later

on Thursday for their third round of talks this year about the

latter's nuclear activity. At the same time, the U.S. has built

up one of its biggest military deployments in the Middle East

ahead of possible strikes on the Islamic Republic.

U.S. President Donald Trump had briefly laid out his case

for a possible attack on Iran in his State of the Union speech

earlier this week, saying his preference was to solve the

problem through diplomacy, but that he would not allow Tehran to

have a nuclear weapon. Iran has said its nuclear activity is for

civilian energy production.

That U.S. rhetoric kept oil prices elevated on Thursday, as

investors fretted about potential supply disruption in the event

of a conflict.

In currencies, the yen was back under the spotlight,

as it languished near a two-week low after Japan's government

nominated two academics seen by markets as strong advocates of

economic stimulus to join the board of the Bank of Japan.

The move surprised market participants who viewed it as a

reflection of Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's easy monetary

policy preferences, throwing into question the outlook for

further central bank interest rate hikes.

The currency found support on Thursday after the Yomiuri

newspaper reported that BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda left open the

possibility of a near-term rate hike, while hawkish board member

Hajime Takata similarly called for gradual policy tightening.

Key developments that could influence markets on Thursday:

* U.S.-Iran talks

* U.S. weekly jobless claims

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