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European stocks drop as traders await US employment data; Wall Street futures are down

European stocks drop as traders await US employment data; Wall Street futures are down
European stocks drop as traders await US employment data; Wall Street futures are down

Wall Street was also set to start lower on Tuesday as traders were cautious ahead of important?U.S. jobs data.

Investors were eagerly awaiting the October and November U.S. The October and November?U.S. employment reports are due in the later session after the data collection was delayed during the U.S. shutdown.

After the Fed's comments when it reduced rates last week were interpreted as being less hawkish that anticipated, this could affect expectations for the U.S. Federal Reserve monetary policy in the coming year. This would strengthen expectations for further rate cuts by 2026. The stock markets dropped during Asian trading. MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan fell to its lowest level in three weeks. Data showed that the growth in China's manufacturing output stagnated in November to a low of 15 months. European indexes opened lower as well and were unable to gain any ground. At 1219 GMT the STOXX 600 index was down by 0.1%, London's FTSE 100 down 0.5%, and Germany's DAX down 0.4%. The progress in the Russia-Ukraine talks has contributed to a decline in European defence stocks. The pullback is still a concern, given that stock markets are expected to reach record highs by 2025. In fact, the STOXX 600 is on course for a 14.8% increase in 2025.

The MSCI world index fell by 0.3% for the day, but was up 19.8% over the course of the year. The U.S. jobs report is expected to show that the federal government's "cost-cutting" led to a decrease in nonfarm payrolls in October. This will be followed by an increase in job growth in November.

"Either the economy accelerates or you get good numbers." You may not have a good number, and therefore expect the Federal Reserve to cut rates further," said Kevin Thozet. He is a member of Carmignac’s investment committee. U.S. index futures point to a lower opening for Wall Street. Nasdaq and S&P 500 both fell by 0.1%. On Monday, the yield curve between U.S. ten-year and two-year notes was at its steepest level since April's tariff shock.

CENTRAL BANK 'MEETINGS', MORE DATA Investors will also be watching for U.S. Inflation data on Thursday. However, a few key details may not be available. Also, central bank meetings, including decisions about rate policy from the Bank of England and the European Central Bank, as well as the Bank of Japan, are expected. The U.S. Dollar Index was down around 0.1% to 98.144. This is close to a multi-week low against the yen and euro. The euro rose 0.1% to $1.1765. The European PMI data revealed that the growth of euro zone business activity was slower than expected by 2025.

Lower energy prices have pushed the eurozone's terms-of-trade - the ratio of exports to imports - closer to the highest levels in the past four years. In a client note, ING's global head of markets Chris Turner wrote that this is a "clean?euro-positive". The yields on government bonds in the Eurozone were not much changed. The German 10-year bond yield was 2.8543. Data showed that the unemployment rate in Britain was at its highest since the beginning of 2021, and the pay growth in Britain's private sector had been the lowest in five years. The UK's five-year and ten-year gilt yields rose after stronger-than-expected UK flash PMI data.

Oil prices dropped, falling below $60 per barrel for the very first time since months. Traders believed that a Russia-Ukraine deal was more likely. This raised expectations of sanctions being eased and more oil becoming available, which would lead to lower prices. (Reporting and editing by Sharon Singleton in Paris)

(source: Reuters)