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The morning bid rally in Europe turns ugly

The morning bid rally in Europe turns ugly
The morning bid rally in Europe turns ugly

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

A sell-off in technology stocks spread across Asia on Monday, as investors slammed brakes on AI's red-hot rally. South Korea's KOSPI fell by more than 8% and triggered circuit breakers.

The move?followed?that of the Wall Street shakeout last week, after an explosive U.S. employment report heightened expectations for Federal Reserve rate hikes - a bane to growth stocks.

According to CME FedWatch, the markets now price in a greater than 70% chance of the Fed raising rates in December. This is up from just 45%?a week earlier.

The nonfarm payrolls data released on Friday came only days after Broadcom reported a disappointing result last week. This sent its stock plummeting, and also dragged down the share prices of technology companies.

When expectations are so high, a slight miss can be a major blow.

Most analysts and investors have dismissed the latest sell-off as "a healthy correction" with concentration risks and leveraged position?amplifying market movements. However, it is still unclear how long this rout will continue.

The dollar reached a new two-month high in other markets. This was due to the Fed's bets on a rate hike and the resilience of the U.S. economic system.

Investors are on high alert as Tokyo is expected to continue buying yen in order to stem the currency's decline.

On Monday, revised gross domestic product figures showed that Japan's economy had lost momentum from the previous quarter to the first three months of this year. This was due to a slowdown in capital expenditure.

The data calendar is light for Monday, but the week ahead will be dominated by the SpaceX listing, U.S. Inflation data and a European Central Bank meeting.

The war in the Middle East continues, with Israel claiming to have struck military targets on?western Iran and central Iran, despite the fact that U.S. president Donald Trump had reportedly instructed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu not to launch any further attacks.

Market developments on Monday that may have a significant impact

Boeing will?release numbers for May deliveries and orders

- Global airline CEOs gathering for an event in Rio de Janeiro

France: Reopening the 3-month, 4-months, 6-months and 11-months government debt auctions

- Germany: Reopening 5-month and 11 month government debt auctions

(source: Reuters)