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US yields are easing; stocks jump after key earnings reports

US yields are easing; stocks jump after key earnings reports

The major stock indexes rose sharply Monday as investors awaited the quarterly earnings reports of large U.S. corporations this week. Meanwhile, U.S. Treasury rates edged down ahead of forthcoming U.S. China trade discussions. Gold prices increased by more than 2% as investors awaited further U.S. rate cuts, and the demand for safe haven assets remained strong. Investors also monitor the U.S. government shutdown which is now in its twentieth consecutive day. Government agencies haven't published key economic reports as a consequence. However, the September U.S. Consumer Price Index is expected to come out on Friday.

Kevin Hassett, White House economist, said on Monday that

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This week is likely to be the last.

Investors are eager to hear this week's reports from Tesla, IBM and other major companies. Wall Street saw the major U.S. indexes rise by more than 1% each.

Jake Dollarhide is the chief executive of Longbow Asset Management, located in Tulsa.

"Ofcourse, if there are some disappointing earnings that could negatively affect the market. Investors have a rose-colored view of the year and are feeling good.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average grew 515.97, or 1.12% to 46,706.58, while the S&P 500 climbed 71.12, or 1.07% to 6,735.13, and the Nasdaq Composite rose 310.57, or 1.37% to 22,990.54. Some market watchers believe that tighter credit conditions may help to reduce some of the froth on the market as U.S. regional bank earnings continue to roll in.

The MSCI index of global stocks rose by 11.79 points or 1.20% to 956.9.

European shares closed higher after initial concerns about the stability of U.S. banks eased.

The pan-European STOXX 600 rose by 1.03%. The U.S. Treasury secretary Scott Bessent announced on Friday that he will meet with Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng this week in Malaysia. He said he hopes to prevent an escalation of U.S. Tariffs on Chinese Goods, which U.S. president Donald Trump has said is unsustainable.

Trump confirmed that he will meet Chinese President Xi Jinping next week in South Korea, and expressed his admiration for him. The yield on the benchmark 10-year U.S. notes dropped 2.7 basis points from Friday's 4.009% to 3.982%.

The dollar grew against the yen, and other currencies. The odds of a Bank of Japan interest rate increase this month were reduced by the markets to just under 20%. Meanwhile, in France, tensions on the political front eased. A coalition agreement in Japan has paved the way for Sanae Takaichi, who is pro-stimulus, to become Prime Minister. Federal Reserve is still widely expected to reduce interest rates next month by a quarter point and again in December.

The dollar index (which measures the greenback in relation to a basket currencies) rose by 0.07%, reaching 98.61. Meanwhile, the euro fell by 0.08%, falling to $1.1642. The dollar gained 0.06% against the Japanese yen to reach 150.71.

Spot gold increased 2.5% to $4.354.79 per ounce.

Oil prices

The price of oil has dropped to its lowest level since early May, amid fears about an upcoming supply glut.

Brent crude futures dropped 28 cents or 0.46% to settle at $60.01 a barrel. U.S. West Texas Intermediate Futures fell 2 cents or 0.03% to $57.52.

(source: Reuters)