Latest News

Wall Street watches Netflix as Dollar recovers after Fed fear

Wall Street watches Netflix as Dollar recovers after Fed fear

The European stock market recovered from a four-day loss streak thanks to a healthy earnings report. Wall Street watched Netflix, and the dollar rose after U.S. president Donald Trump denied rumors that he would fire Fed chief Jerome Powell.

Traders also had just seen a good batch of U.S. Retail Sales and Jobless Claims numbers, which provided more insight into how tariffs impact the economy. This gave a bit more energy to the S&P 500 and greenback futures.

The STOXX 600 index of Europe was already enjoying a successful day, after records orders from Swiss engineering giant ABB and profits of $13.5 billion at Taiwanese semiconductor giant TSMC added to the growing optimism over a potential EU-US trade agreement.

GE Aerospace also raised its profit forecast ahead of the U.S. open bell, although the currency markets remained the broader focal point.

Kit Juckes, of Societe Generale, described the Wednesday "madness" that was sparked by the reports that Trump would be removing the Fed chief as "madness". The dollar is now trading below $1.16 per euro.

The yen strengthened further as the polls showed that Prime Minister Shigeru Shiba's government was at risk of losing the majority in the upper chamber in upcoming elections. It fell to its lowest level since April, 148.73 per dollar.

The data also showed that the Asian nation was starting to feel the effects of tariffs, with exports down for the second consecutive month. Meanwhile, the Australian dollar fell 1% over night after the weak employment figures there.

Juckes stated that "the market is now solidly short of the dollar, and as we enter high summer people are beginning to buy back some."

Watching NETFLIX

Netflix also owed earnings in the future.

Chris Weston said that the broker Pepperstone's head of research, Chris Weston, stated the company has outperformed S&P 500 by 33 percentage points year-to date. Analysts are still bullish and the firm "will have to blow out the lights with a solid raise and beat," he added.

Wall Street futures pointed to a modestly higher start in the second half of the year, with Nasdaq expected to continue its recent streak of record highs.

TSMC shares listed in the United States gained 4% after its impressive results. Advanced Micro Devices gained 1.2% while Nvidia, worth $4 trillion, rose 0.7%.

After a four-day slide, European stocks rose by a comfortable 0.7%. Nikkei in Japan and bluechips in Taiwan and China all saw overnight gains of 0.3% to 0.6%.

Alimentation Couche-Tard, a Canadian retailer, withdrew a $47 billion bid to take over Seven & i Holdings. The company cited a lack constructive engagement from the operator of 7-Eleven convenient stores.

Seven & i Holdings shares fell to a low of three months and finished down by over 9%.

Trump's denial of Powell's speculation helped calm volatile markets. However, he left the door open for the possibility of removing him. He also renewed his criticism of Powell as the U.S. central bank chief who has not cut interest rates.

Francesco Pesole, an ING analyst, said that "after yesterday's panic, markets are probably even more resistant to headlines about this topic." In that hour, however, we saw what we expected: the steepening of the U.S. Yield Curve and a sharp drop in the dollar.

The benchmark 10-year Treasury rate barely moved on U.S. Retail numbers, sitting just below 4.47%. German Bund yields remained steady at 2.695% after reaching their highest level since late March this week.

Brent oil prices lost their initial momentum and stalled at $68.46 per barrel. The safe-haven gold price dropped almost 1%, to $3,314 per ounce.

(source: Reuters)