Latest News

The global stock index drops as the dollar rises, while precious metals are mixed

MSCI's global equity gauge fell on Tuesday, with technology stocks leading the losses on Wall Street. The dollar rose broadly after the latest U.S. Economic data. In precious metals, silver outperformed the gold following a recent drop. Prices of oil?were slightly lower. Oil prices spiked Tuesday, after the United States shot a drone belonging to Iran and armed boats approached an American-flagged ship in a major waterway.

U.S. Treasury Yields initially lost some steam following ADP's National Employment Report, which showed a slower-than expected growth in January. Private employment increased by 22,000 after a downwardly-revised 37,000 job increase in December, and compared to economists' expectations of a 48,000 job advance.

According to the Institute for Supply Management, U.S. service sector remained stable in January. However, businesses spent more on inputs. This suggests that services inflation may pick up following a recent slowdown. CME Group’s FedWatch tool shows that traders were still betting on the Federal Reserve cutting rates in June.

Emily Roland, Manulife John Hancock Investments' co-chief investment strategy, said that the data were neither too hot nor too cold.

Wall Street saw value stocks outperform growth stocks. The market was dominated by a sell-off of global data analytics, professional service and software providers following Anthropic’s Friday launch of plug ins for its Claude Cowork Agent, which sparked fears of AI-driven disruption in these?industries. The U.S. Software and Services Index was down 0.4% on Wednesday after dropping more than 12% over the past five days.

There were valuation concerns on the software side. There is a resetting. Roland said that the 'healthy thing' is this broadening of participation in the market and this rotation towards value.

The S&P 500 growth index fell 1.3%, while the value index rose 0.9%.

At 11:32 a.m., (1632 GMT), the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose by 366.30, or 0.75% to 49,609.86. The S&P 500 dropped 17.53 points or 0.25% to 6,900.54, and the Nasdaq Composite declined 260.89, or 1.12%, to 22,995.54.

The MSCI index of global stocks fell by 2.45 points or 0.23% to 1,041.53. The pan-European STOXX 600 rose by 0.15%.

Gold prices dropped while silver rose, both commodities losing steam from earlier sessions as attention was focused on geopolitical developments and the next U.S. Economic releases that could influence expectations for future interest rates. After a two-day meltdown, both precious metals rose on Tuesday following the announcement by U.S. president Donald Trump that Kevin Warsh would be his choice to lead the Federal Reserve. Some investors believe that Warsh will shrink the Federal Reserve's balance sheet and put pressure on precious metals.

Spot gold dropped 0.41% to $4.918.06 per ounce. Spot silver increased 1.6% to $86.48 per ounce.

On the fixed income market, traders were evaluating the data from private sources while they waited for delayed economic releases by government sources. They also continued to assess the impact Warsh could have on monetary policies.

The yield on the benchmark U.S. 10 year notes increased 0.3 basis points from 4.273% to 4.276% late Tuesday. Meanwhile, the 30-year bond rate rose 0.9 basis point to 4.9149%.

The yield on the 2-year bond, which moves typically in line with expectations of interest rates?for Federal Reserve, dropped 0.9 basis points, to 3.564%. The dollar gained against the yen, pushing it towards its fourth daily decline. This is ahead of the elections that are expected to increase Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s fiscal and defence spending ambitions.

The dollar index (which measures the greenback in relation to a basket including the yen, the euro and other currencies) rose by 0.28%, reaching 97.68. However, the euro fell by 0.18%, falling to $1.1797.

The dollar gained 0.61% against the Japanese yen to 156.68. The pound fell 0.31%, to $1.3655.

Oil prices on energy markets were slightly lower, as traders digested and monitored the latest geopolitical data.

U.S. crude climbed 0.02%, to $63.22 per barrel. Brent was up to $67.45 a barrel on the same day.

(source: Reuters)