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MORNING BID AMERICAS - Tokyo takes off

MORNING BID AMERICAS - Tokyo takes off
MORNING BID AMERICAS - Tokyo takes off

By Mike Dolan

February 9th -

What's important in the U.S. and Global Markets Today By Mike Dolan Editor-at-Large of Finance and Markets

Asian stocks rose on Monday following Prime Minister Takaichi’s election victory on Sunday. She is now poised to implement a number of fiscal measures.

Wall Street futures remained steady following a strong chipmaker-led recovery on Friday. The focus now turns to the 'barrage' of U.S. Economic Data due out this week.

Below, I'll go into more detail. Listen to the Morning Bid podcast. Subscribe to the Morning Bid daily podcast and hear journalists discussing the latest news in finance and markets seven days a weeks.

TOKYO TAKES OF Asia shares rose on Monday, after the Japanese Prime Minister's Liberal Democratic Party won more than two thirds of the seats in the lower house of the parliament. Takaichi’s mandate for more spending and tax reductions helped the Nikkei to jump nearly 4%, reaching a new record high. On Monday, the yen was largely stable and so were Japanese government bonds. This could be because the markets have already priced in Takaichi’s extravagant fiscal agenda. Investors now await more information about how Takaichi will finance her lavish fiscal agenda.

Expectations that the government would intervene directly in the foreign exchange market if the yen fell below the crucial 160-per-dollar level also helped to support the yen. Wall Street futures remained steady after the decisive Friday rebound that took the S&P and Nasdaq 2% higher. Nvidia AMD and Broadcom, all of which jumped by over 7%, were the main drivers behind the recovery. Software and data service companies, who had been hit by AI concerns earlier in the week, recovered some of their losses. Chipmakers may gain, but AI hyperscalers could lose, as a result of continued concern about their high-spending plans. Amazon, for example, fell 5.6% Friday after announcing a plan to increase capex by more than 50% in 2026. Investors also seemed to be moving away from expensive mega-caps in favor of smaller, cheaper companies. The S&P 500, Nasdaq and Russell 2000 all posted gains of around 3.5% on Friday.

The mood is generally brighter this week than in mid-last week. Wall Street's so called fear gauge, VIX, fell for the first time in 3 days on Friday. Gold and silver, both commodities, firmed up on Monday following strong Friday rebound. The influx of U.S. data, including the delayed January employment report, is expected to be the major event of the coming week. Investors will also be looking at retail sales and CPI to see if they can find?signs that the economy is weak enough to justify a rate cut in mid-year.

Chart of the day

Japan's Nikkei rose nearly 4% Monday, surpassing the 56,000 mark for the first. The ruling LDP party has a decisive majority that will allow for increased spending and tax reductions.

Watch today's events

Bill auctions in the U.S. for 3-month and 6-month bills

* Fed Governor Christopher Waller and Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic speak

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(source: Reuters)