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MORNING Bid EUROPE - Japan markets welcome the chance to have a long-staying PM

Wayne Cole gives us a look at what the future holds for European and global markets.

The markets like it when there is a political event. Sanae Takaichi, Japan's first woman Prime Minister, blew the competition out of the water in the election. This sparked a rally of 4.5% in the Nikkei index to "all-time" highs. The index actually broke 55,000, 56, 000, and 57,000 in a single go.

The LDP's best ever result was a resounding victory as it took 316 out of 465 seats at the lower house of parliament. Takaichi, together with its coalition partner Japan Innovation Party, controls 352 seats, a supermajority two-thirds.

If Takaichi follows through on her election promises, this will open the door to more defence spending, tax reductions, corporate reform, and a reflationary strategy in general.

Two-year JGB yields reached their highest level since 1996, at 1.3%.

The yen was already sold in anticipation of victory. So the knee-jerk adjustment to the position helped the currency make a modest recovery. The dollar dropped around 0.3%, to 156.80yen. Meanwhile, the euro and Swiss Francs slid from their early record highs.

In the longer term, Japan may have a leader and government that will last 'for more than one year or two, providing a period of welcome stability in a time when geopolitical changes are tearing at its foundations.

The Mandelson scandal claimed another victim, and Prime Minister Starmer had to bid his chief adviser goodbye over the weekend.

There is still no clarity on whether Starmer will be able to hold onto power or who would succeed him if the party were to remove him. This leaves gilts susceptible to periodic debt fears.

The carnage of leveraged momentum play seems to have slowed down for the time being, with the price of silver rising another 3%, and Bitcoin remaining steady, if a little bit drunk.

The payrolls report, retails sales and CPI are all expected to be released this week due to delays in U.S. data. This could be a first.

Forecasts vary from a 10% drop to 135,000 jobs, due to statistical quirks and the birth-death models. Analysts assume that there will also be significant downward revisions in the payroll levels for last year.

Markets are heavily pricing in a rate cut from the Fed for June, so any positive surprise would have a huge impact.

Market developments on Monday that may have a significant impact

ECB President Christine Lagarde speaks, as does board member Philip Lane. Bank of England policymaker Catherine Mann is speaking - Fed speakers are governors Christopher Waller, Stephen Miran and Fed Bank of Atlanta president Raphael Bostic

(source: Reuters)