Latest News

The dollar is steady near its one-year high as world stocks rise on the chip rally

Global stocks rose Thursday, as chipmakers' strong earnings lifted sentiment. Meanwhile, the dollar hovered at a year-high, with investors still wary of stretched valuations.

S&P 500 and Nasdaq, the benchmark indexes on Wall Street, were both up, with industrials, healthcare, and materials stocks leading the way. Micron rose 10% as the memory chipmaker’s strong forecast contributed to its AI-driven rise. Qualcomm gained 4% following its announcement that it expects to generate $15 billion in annual sales through its data center division by 2029.

Nasdaq fell, but was dragged lower by the choppy trades among megacap technology companies. Apple fell 5.3%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 1%. The S&P 500 rose 0.21%. And the Nasdaq Composite dropped 0.46%.

AI VALUATIONS & INTEREST RATE DRIVE SENTIMENT

Recent days have seen markets become volatile due to investor concern that AI-related company valuations are 'extended after years of gains. Markets are also pricing in higher interest rate from the U.S. Federal Reserve and other central bankers.

Marc Dizard is the chief investment officer of Huntington Bank. He said that if you compare the S&P 500 without technology to the tech sector, the two are about 2.8 standard differences apart.

When you consider the magnitude of the move, we don't find it surprising that there would be a "pause", some consolidation, and a rebalancing, where investors take profits off the board."

The broad STOXX 600 index rose by 0.92% in Europe. The MSCI index of global stocks rose by 0.42%.

"Technology will be a long-term asset, as the story unfolds. Not necessarily within the next six month." When the Fed adopts a hawkish stance, long-term assets will be sold off during that period, Dizard explained. The U.S. data showed that inflation in the United States rose above 4% for the first three years on Thursday, as energy prices were boosted by the Middle East conflict. However, the monthly reading came in slightly lower than expected, which helped to drive yields down. The yield on the benchmark U.S. 10 year notes dropped?1.37 basis point to 4.386%. The yield on 2-year notes fell 2.64 basis point to 4.111%.

OIL BACK AT PRE-WAR LEVELS Oil 'prices' edged up but remained near levels seen just before the U.S. and Israeli war against Iran. This was due to the expectation of a rising Middle East supply outweighing demand concerns.

Brent crude futures rose?1%, to $74.49 per barrel.

The dollar was down against its major counterparts but still close to its highest level in the past year. The euro last traded at $1.1388, just a hair above the 13-month low of Wednesday, and the Japanese yen neared its lowest level in over 40 years versus the dollar. Tokyo is widely expected to intervene again after the last bout, around May, failed to stop the currency's slide. The yen gained 0.1% to 161.63 dollars. The dollar index (which measures the greenback in relation to a basket of currencies, including the yen, the euro and others) fell by 0.29%, reaching 101.30. The dollar dropped, and gold rose. Spot gold increased 0.68% to $4.027.67 per ounce.

(source: Reuters)