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Fear and caution grip the markets

Rae Wee gives us a look at what the European and global markets will be like tomorrow.

The Asian markets were again a sea of red on Tuesday. This gloomy mood is expected to spread into Europe as investors prepare for the earnings report from artificial intelligence darling Nvidia, and the long-awaited U.S. employment report due later this week.

The market sentiment leading up to the release was fragile. Nvidia had a high bar for delivering results that would blow the roof off and justify all the massive investments companies pour into AI.

The semiconductor giant's AI chips have been a bellwether theme for a number of companies in the technology sector, as well as those involved with the massive infrastructure expansion that supports AI.

The sector is still shaken by the fear of a bubble. It has been compared to the dotcom boom-bust in the 1990s.

The latest sign that there is unease comes after a regulatory filing revealed that the hedge fund of tech billionaire Peter Thiel sold its entire stake in Nvidia.

SoftBank Group, a Japanese company, announced last week that it had sold the 32.1 millions Nvidia shares held by it in October. The proceeds were used to fund CEO Masayoshi son's AI drive.

In Japan, Prime Minister Sanae Taichi will meet Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo ueda in the afternoon.

The yen has been falling to multi-month lows, and is now above 155 dollars per yen. This is close to levels that led to a currency intervention in Japan last year.

Satsuki Catayama, Japanese Finance Minister, said that she was "alarmed by the one-sided and rapid movements" on the foreign exchange markets.

Takaichi has promoted those who support fiscal and monetary stimuli to important posts, which is a blow to their efforts.

The Nikkei reported on Saturday that Japan may spend around 17 trillion yen (110 billion dollars) for Takaichi’s first stimulus package.

The yield on the JGBs of 20 years has reached its highest level since July 1999.

The following are the key developments that may influence Tuesday's markets:

Fed's Barr Barkin Logan Speak

U.S. Factory Orders (August)

(source: Reuters)