Latest News

Stocks rebound from AI-led damage; US inflation eases

Stocks rebound from AI-led damage; US inflation eases
Stocks rebound from AI-led damage; US inflation eases

Investors digested central bank decisions that highlighted divergent monetary policies around the world. Global shares rose Thursday, after?benign U.S. data on inflation. U.S. consumer prices rose less than expected during the year ending November. This initially hurt the dollar, but lifted equities on the hope of U.S. interest rate cuts in 2019.

The pound rose after the Bank of England reduced interest rates, but indicated that further easing was unlikely.

As expected, the European Central Bank left euro zone rates unchanged and took a more optimistic tone about the economy.

Bank of Japan expected to raise rates on Friday. However, traders are still uncertain about the rate of tightening in 2026.

STOCKS GET DATA-DRIVEN BOOST

European stocks rose, with the STOXX600 up 0.3%. U.S. futures increased 0.7%-1.4%. This suggests a respite from Wednesday's tech led selloff.

The U.S. The Labor Department reported that the Consumer Price Index increased 2.7% on an annual basis in November. This was below the economists' expectations of 3.1%.

Import tariffs are partly to blame for affordability concerns, but the technical moderation is still evident.

Some people may dismiss this report because it is less reliable than usual. But ignore it at your own risk. Brian Jacobsen is the chief economist at Annex Wealth Management. He said that other indicators such as rent prices and used car values are in line with the idea that old inflation drivers are not the current sources of inflation. Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller said that the central bank could cut rates if it saw signs of weakness in the labour market. Donald Trump, the U.S. president, said on Wednesday that the next Fed Chair would be someone "who believed in lowering rates by a lot." The Fed has indicated that it will only make one rate reduction next year.

BOE CUTS AND ECB HOLDS

The BoE reduced rates by 25 basis point in a vote that was narrower than expected.

"There are enough people on the rate-setting panel who think: 'I don't want this to be a trend'. Chris Beauchamp is the chief market analyst at IG Markets. He said: "I'd rather wait and see if this turns into a trend."

"I believe the reasoning is there? Probably, but you need to be patient for it to turn green. "I suppose you're only getting the amber light right now," he said.

As ECB president Christine Lagarde started her press conference, the euro rose 0.12% to $1.1752.

Treasuries firmed up, with yields on two-year bonds down by 2 basis points to 3.464%. Yields on 10-year bonds were also lower by 1.8 basis points to 4.133%.

The price of oil rose for the second consecutive day, as Trump's blockade on Venezuelan exports continued and there were reports of new U.S. sanction against Russian oil. U.S. crude oil rose by 0.6% to $56.12 per barrel while Brent crude climbed 0.4% to $59,93. (Additional reporting by Stella Qui in Sydney. Kate Mayberry, Mark Potter and Kate Mayberry edited the article.

(source: Reuters)