Latest News

The party is ruined by the MORNING BID EUROPE

The party is ruined by the MORNING BID EUROPE

Rae Wee gives us a look at what the future holds for European and global markets.

The European markets were set to open gloomy on Wednesday after the Wall Street slump pushed Asian stocks into the red. Technology stocks led the decline.

Analysts pointed out that while there was no immediate cause, a number of factors were at play, including doubts about the high valuations of the tech giants and the growing influence of President Donald Trump over the sector.

Sources say that U.S. Commerce secretary Howard Lutnick has been looking at the possibility of the government taking equity stakes into Intel and other chip companies as a way to exchange grants for the CHIPS Act, which was intended to encourage factory building across the country.

This move follows other recent deals Washington made with U.S. firms, such as allowing AI chip maker Nvidia's H20 chips to be sold to China for 15% of the sales.

Critics are concerned about the government's involvement in corporate affairs. They say Trump's actions have created new categories of risk for corporations and that a bad wager could result in a loss to taxpayers.

Vishnu Varathan, head of Asia macro research at Mizuho and a former Japan resident, said: "This U.S. State/Presidential creep is unhealthy, as it threatens erode margins, dent demand/topline, and erode margins."

The tech-heavy Asian indexes in Taiwan, South Korea, and Japan fell by 2.6% and 1,7% respectively. EuroStoxx 50 futures dropped 0.7%. Nasdaq's futures fell 0.5%.

Traders in London, besides the tech gloom will also be paying attention to UK inflation numbers, with expectations that headline consumer prices have increased slightly on an annualized basis in July.

The UK has the highest inflation rate of all major economies and it is about one percentage point higher than the United States and the Eurozone.

The Bank of England would be a bit worried if there were any positive surprises. According to the economists surveyed, the central bank is expected to reduce interest rates again by a quarter point this year and in 2026.

The New Zealand dollar fell on other markets after the central banks cut rates. They also indicated that they would be reducing them further in the coming months, as they warned about domestic and global headwinds.

The Reserve Bank of New Zealand stated that the economy had stagnated in the second quarter and reduced its projected floor rate for cash to 2.55% from the 2.85% predicted in May.

The following are key developments that may influence the markets on Wednesday.

UK Inflation (July).

FOMC Meeting Minutes for July

Fed's Waller and Bostic speak

(source: Reuters)