A look at the day ahead in European and global markets from
Stella Qiu
After relentlessly pushing higher and higher, global
share markets seem to have run out of reasons to rally further
as investors come to grips with how stretched valuations are.
Wall Street closed lower for a second day and that provided
little direction for Asia, with stocks here mostly sticking to
tight ranges. Chinese bluechips, however, were an
exception, up 0.9%, catching up on the global AI surge.
Europe is also set for a flat open, with EUROSTOXX 50
futures little changed. Wall Street futures were up
0.2%.
Maybe it was month-end or quarter-end rebalancing flows -
after all Asian shares have rallied 9% for the quarter and
Japan's Nikkei up 13%. Or it could be more Fed speakers sounding
a little cautious on the prospects of rate cuts.
Futures still imply a 92% chance for a rate cut from the Fed
in October, but the total expected easing has faded to 100 bps,
from 125 bps a few weeks ago.
San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly echoed other central
bankers by suggesting while further rate cuts are needed, their
timing remains unclear. More Fed officials will be speaking
during the day, including New York President John Williams, and
we will get to see how many doves there are under President
Donald Trump's unprecedented scrutiny of the board.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent will start interviewing
candidates next week to replace Jerome Powell as the Fed Chair.
The dollar held onto its mysterious bounce overnight, up
0.6% against major peers, but its short-term technical outlook
is still dim. Still, the bounce has left yen bulls
reeling after some traders piled into long yen positions
following the Bank of Japan's hawkish policy meeting last week.
That spilled into yen crosses, with the Swiss franc hitting
an all-time high on the yen and the euro hovering at
over a one-year peak at 174.66, just below a record
top of 175.90.
Next up, we have weekly U.S. jobless claims and the final
estimate for the second quarter U.S. GDP, before the
all-important Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) on Friday.
A sharp rise in jobless claims - which has gained some added
significance given the focus on the labour market - would
reinforce the case of two more cuts this year, while a strong
result would likely bolster the dollar and send short-term
yields higher.
Key developments that could influence markets on Thursday:
-- U.S. data, including trade, weekly jobless claims,
durable goods
--Six Federal Reserve officials scheduled to speak: Austan
Goolsbee, John Williams, Jeffrey Schmid, Michelle Bowman,
Michael Barr and Mary Daly
-- U.S. Treasury auctions $44 billion of 7-year notes
(Editing by Sam Holmes)