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Wall Street to open with a higher opening after US inflation data

Wall Street to open with a higher opening after US inflation data

The European stock market struggled to find direction on Friday but was still on course for another weekly increase. Wall Street futures were boosted by data showing that U.S. Inflation rose less than anticipated last month.

Wall Street closed higher on Friday, after the White House confirmed that U.S. president Donald Trump will meet Chinese President Xi Jinping as part of his Asia trip next week.

The pan-European STOXX 600 index was flat at 1242 GMT, but it is still on course for a weekly increase. London's FTSE 100 rose by about 0.1%.

INFLATION DATA

Wall Street futures rose following the inflation data. S&P 500 E-minis were up 0.6%, and Nasdaq E-minis were up 0.9%.

The MSCI World Equity Index was up 0.1% for a total gain of 1.3% on the overall week.

The Consumer Price Index increased by 0.3% in September, after rising 0.4% in August. This was less than expected at 0.4%.

Brad Conger said in an email that he expected the reading to be higher than usual due to tariffs being passed through into consumer prices.

Our base case is that CPI will remain high over the next six months as final price adjustments."

The U.S. Stock Markets have surged in this year and reached record highs, as traders invest money in artificial intelligence while betting that the U.S. Federal Reserve continues to reduce rates. Analysts claim there are signs that a bubble is forming.

At its meeting next Monday, the Fed is expected cut rates by 25 basis point. After Friday's inflation report, traders increased their bets on rate cuts.

Peter Fitzgerald, Chief Investment Officer for Macro at Aviva Investors, said: "It is a continuation in a generally supportive environment for equity markets where interest rates have been broadly falling across developed markets with Japan being the notable exception. Volatility has begun to drop again after a short spike, and there are no major earnings surprises."

He said that it was impossible to know when or how a bull market would end.

TRUMP CANCELS CANADA TRADE NEGATIONS

The dollar index was 98.863, unchanged on the day.

Trump's announcement on Twitter that he would be ending all trade talks with Canada had a limited impact on the Canadian dollar.

The euro remained steady at $1.1628. Data showed that the euro zone's business activity grew more rapidly than expected in October. After the data, yields on euro zone government bonds rose. Germany's Bund reached 2.612%.

The oil prices that had increased by 5% following the U.S. sanctions against major Russian oil companies have now eased down, but are still on course for a gain of 5% per week.

Gold fell around 1.2% per day to $4,075.39 an ounce. It is on course for a weekly decline, ending its nine week winning streak.

Apple and Microsoft are among the five companies that will be reporting earnings next week. Intel's earnings beat expectations on Thursday.

(source: Reuters)