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Dollar up but on course for third consecutive weekly drop

Dollar up but on course for third consecutive weekly drop
Dollar up but on course for third consecutive weekly drop

The major stock indexes fell sharply on Friday. Investors were cautious about artificial intelligence bets and the dollar, as well as U.S. Treasury Yields, edged up after recent losses.

Oracle, a cloud computing company, warned earlier this week of massive spending and poor forecasts. Broadcom, a chipmaker, warned late on Thursday about margins. Technology fell the most of all major S&P sectors, 2.5%. Broadcom shares fell 10.9% while Oracle dropped 4.6%, and AI leader Nvidia declined 2.1%. Investors are optimistic about future U.S. rate cuts after the U.S. Federal Reserve reduced interest rates by 25 basis point on Wednesday. The decision was made 9-3, but policymakers have indicated that they will put any further reductions on hold for now. The Federal Reserve has expressed concern about the cooling of the labor market and inflation that remains high.

Tony Welch is the chief investment officer of SignatureFD, a financial firm in Atlanta.

The U.S. data on unemployment claims showed that the number of Americans who filed new applications for unemployment benefit increased last week by the highest amount in almost 4-1/2 years. On Thursday next week, the Bank of England is expected cut rates. Although traders now speculate that the European Central Bank could raise rates in 2026, it is expected to maintain its current rate. After strong signals by Governor Kazuo ueda, the Bank of Japan will likely increase rates.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 227.77, or 0.47 percent, to 48.476.68. The S&P 500 fell 74.28, or 1.08 percent, to 6,826.72, and the Nasdaq Composite fell by 385.86, or 1.53%, to 23207.99.

The MSCI index of global stocks fell 6.69 points or 0.66% to 1,008.55. The pan-European STOXX 600 fell by 0.53%.

Investors weighed the comments of a number of Fed speakers, and an optimistic outlook for the economy.

Fed officials who voted to oppose the U.S. Central Bank's rate cut last week expressed concern on Friday that inflation is still too high for lower borrowing costs. The yield of the benchmark 10-year Treasury bill The rate rose by 4.5 basis point to 4.186%, and nearly 5 basis point on the week. It is on track for its second consecutive weekly increase.

German government bond rates rose this week after reaching their highest level in March. This highlights how investors are pricing in rate hikes in the euro zone, in stark contrast to those in the United States where rates seem to be falling. Germany's 30-year bond yield, which is more sensitive to fiscal concerns over the long term, has risen to a new?14-year-high of 3.498%. This represents a 3.5-basis-point increase.

DOLLAR GAINS AND POUND FALLS Slightly On UK Data

After falling against major currencies in recent sessions, the U.S. Dollar has risen again, but is still on track for its third consecutive weekly drop amid the prospect that the Fed will cut interest rates next year.

Sterling eased as data revealed that the UK economy unexpectedly contracted in the three-month period ending October. The sterling fell 0.28%, to $1.3348. The dollar index (which measures the greenback in relation to a basket of currencies, including the yen, the euro and others) rose by 0.15% at 98.48.

COAL PLUNGES TO RECORD LOW

Copper fell more than 3% after reaching a new record earlier in the day, as fears about the AI bubble burst prompted a selloff of all riskier assets.

As of 1700 GMT, the benchmark three-month copper price on London Metal Exchange was down as much as 3.5% at $11,451.50. It was also trading lower by 2.8% to $11,537.50.

U.S. crude climbed 0.16%, to $57.69 per barrel. Brent increased to $61.32 a barrel, up by 0.07% for the day. Caroline Valetkevitch reported; Elizabeth Howcroft and Chuck Mikolajczak contributed additional reporting from Paris and New York, respectively; Andrew Heavens and Matthew Lewis edited the story.

(source: Reuters)