Latest News

MORNING BID EUROPE - Three-alarm fire, as the tech selloff continues and Takaichi stimuli lands

Gregor Stuart Hunter gives us a look at what the day will bring for the European and Global markets. It seems that Nvidia's profits could only smother a fire on the markets for a limited time. Investor confidence is still in ruins after the stock markets tumbled again on Thursday following a new sell-off of tech shares on Wall Street. Investors are alerted on Friday following the explicit threat from Japanese Finance Minister Satsukikatayama, that an intervention in the FX market could be imminent. This was before the announcement of the lavish $135 billion stimulus package from the Takaichi government, which smashed Japanese government bonds and the Japanese yen. Data released by the Bank of Japan on Friday revealed that core inflation in October increased 3.0% compared to a year ago, well above the central banks' 2% target. The yen rose 0.2% to 157.19yen against the dollar on the back of the intervention talks and investor demand for safety havens. Meanwhile, the Nikkei dropped 2.4% to bring its weekly loss to 3.5%. The MSCI index for Asia-Pacific stocks outside Japan, which is the broadest of the three MSCI indices, fell 2.5% and its weekly loss reached 3.7%. This was the largest drop since the Liberation Day tariff crisis in early April. Early trading in Europe is expected to see the European markets join the selloff. Euro Stoxx futures for the entire region and German DAX were both down 1.4% each, while FTSE futures dropped 1%. Oil prices dropped for the third session in a row on commodities markets amid hopes of a possible peace agreement between Russia and Ukraine. Brent crude dropped 1.3% to $62.54 a barrel. Gold traded 0.7% lower, at $4.059.27 an ounce. In yet another sign of dismay, a fire broke at the venue that hosted the COP30 Summit in Brazil. It disrupted talks and triggered an evacuation, just as negotiators hunkered down to try and land a deal for strengthening international climate efforts.

The U.S. Stock Futures were showing some signs of a recovery, but they are still well below their recent highs. S&P 500 futures e-mini were up last by 0.4%.

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

Economic Data

UK Flash PMI: November, UK Public Sector Net Borrowing Ex-Banks and Retail Sales for October

France's Business Climate Manufacturing and HCOB flash PMI for November

Germany: HCOB flash PMI for November

Euro zone: Flash PMI from HCOB for November

Debt auctions:

UK government debt: 1 month, 3 months and 6 months

(source: Reuters)