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The season for choppy morning bids is upon us.

The season for choppy morning bids is upon us.

Gregor Stuart Hunter gives us a look at what the future holds for European and global markets.

It's strange that, despite the fact we have passed the autumnal equinox and are now in the pumpkin spiced latte period, the markets still don't show the usual weakness at this time of year. That is, until today.

Stocks in Asia are dropping after overnight Wall Street sell-offs sparked by weaker-than-expected data on the economy and comments made by Jerome Powell, who gave little clues as to where interest rates will go. Around lunchtime, the MSCI Asia Pacific ex Japan index is down 0.2% for most of Asia.

Even with soggy data, the index has still risen 5.6% this month, and is hovering around a 4-year high. The usual dip buyers were not around, as U.S. stocks futures traded flat. Early European trades showed pan-region futures down 0.4%, DAX futures off by 0.3%, and FTSE Futures down 0.3%.

Australian shares fell almost 1% following a higher-than-expected increase in consumer prices for August. Japan's Nikkei index fell 0.5% in September after the manufacturing sector saw its fastest decline in six months, driven by a further drop in new orders.

There were still some bright spots, particularly in the Chinese markets. Alibaba's Hong Kong listed shares rose 5% on Wednesday after the ecommerce giant announced its largest artificial language model, the Qwen3Max, that contains more than one trillion parameters. This is almost six times more than the original ChatGPT version released three years earlier.

New Zealand named Anna Breman its new central banking governor on Wednesday. She is the first woman to hold the position. The move comes after a major shakeup of the bank following criticisms over its economy management.

Breman is the first deputy governor of the Riksbank, Sweden's central banking institution.

Jimmy Kimmel has returned to the airwaves following a six-day ban for comments made on the air about the man suspected of assassinating Charlie Kirk, a conservative activist. "I cannot believe ABC Fake News has given Jimmy Kimmel back his job," U.S. president Trump wrote on Truth Social. He threatened further action against network.

He posted: "Why would they bring back someone who is so bad, who is not funny and who puts Network in danger by playing 99% positive Democrat garbage?"

The following are key developments that may influence the markets on Wednesday.

Economic Data

Germany: Ifo Business climate, current conditions and expectations for September

Weekly crude oil stock report by EIA: US: new home sales for August

Debt auctions:

Germany: 7-year government debt

U.K.: 4-year government debt

(source: Reuters)