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MORNING BID EUROPE - Trump administration prepares to gut climate law

Gregor Stuart Hunter gives us a look at what the future holds for European and global markets.

Global stocks are at new peaks, aided by the seemingly indefatigable technology?sector. Meanwhile, new measures by the U.S. Government to shake up the climate policy could mark a pain point for ESG Investors.

Environmental Protection Agency announced on Monday that the Trump administration is "set" to reverse the so-called Endangerment Finding this week. The Obama administration's scientific determination that the health of humans is endangered by greenhouse gas emissions, which serves as a legal basis for federal greenhouse gas regulations.

This will pave the path for what EPA administrator Lee Zeldin said to The Wall -Street Journal, "the largest deregulation act in the history" of the United States. The dollar has continued to fall ahead of the release several important U.S. reports this week. These include retail sales on Tuesday, delayed payrolls on Wednesday and inflation data on the Friday.

The dollar index, which measures greenback strength against a basket six currencies, was near its lowest point for the month.

Kevin Hassett, White House economic adviser, said on Monday that job growth could be lower over the next few months due to Trump's immigration policy slowing labour growth while AI increases productivity.

FedWatch, a tool of the CME Group, shows that Fed funds futures indicate the market continues to expect the Federal Reserve to keep interest rates at current levels until June. Stephen Miran, the Fed Governor on Monday, said that Trump's trade tariff policy has been more benign than most had anticipated. He reiterated his call for interest rates to be lowered. He defended central banks' independence, but said that it wasn't absolute.

In the meantime, global stocks have reached record highs. MSCI's All-Country World Index rose 0.2%, setting a new record. The Nikkei 225 soared 2.5% for the third day in a row to reach a new peak following the election win of Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takayichi at the weekend.

The yen?also?strengthened a second time, with the last 0.4% stronger against the U.S. Dollar.

Early European trade saw pan-regional futures and German DAX Futures?flat, while FTSE Futures rose by 0.1%.

The following are the key developments that may influence Tuesday's markets:

Earnings of the company

AstraZeneca, BP, Barclays, Philips, Kering, Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena, Telecom Italia, Ferrari

Economic Events

France's unemployment rate for Q4

U.S. retail sales for December

Debt auctions:

Germany: 5-year government debt

UK: 5-year government debt

(source: Reuters)