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MORNING BID EUROPE - Time to cash in those chips?

Tom Westbrook gives us a look at what the future holds for European and global markets.

South Korea's chip heavy?KOSPI failed to convince on Wednesday after announcing the fifth largest selloff in history.

BNY says that there are signs of a slowdown in the retail investor buying that has driven the index to record-breaking heights. This is especially true after regulators suddenly took a dim view of popular leveraged ETFs.

Markets in Seoul were flat in the morning but climbed before noon. For months, downtown has been filled with traders hunched on phones trading stocks. In Taipei the chipmaking giant TSMC fell.

The next indicator of the?mood in the industry will be Micron's earnings report after the U.S. closing. It is important to see if the chipmaker has announced long-term deals for supply and payments upfront from large customers.

Positioning stretched could lead to disappointment. Bank of America's survey of fund managers in June found that?80% thought long semiconductors was the most crowded trading, a record.

More than half of respondents to the same survey believe that we are in the "boom phase" of the investment cycle for artificial intelligence. We have not reached the stages of euphoria, profit-taking or panic of an asset-price-bubble bursting.

INDONESIA RETAINS EM status, according to the MSCI review

The index provider MSCI has left Indonesia in purgatory after its review of the market classification. Investors are waiting to see if reforms on "free float" and "ownership disclosure" will lead to a more transparent and liquid market.

Jakarta's stock market was a mess after the outcome.

The Ifo survey on business conditions in Germany is expected?later today, and a slight improvement is expected. The dollar is still gaining strength, but the euro remains under pressure.

Investors were wary of a possible joint intervention by the U.S. and Japanese governments to support the yen, as it held at 160.56 yen in Asia after a discussion online between U.S. counterpart Scott Bessent and Japanese Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama.

According to a draft of a report that was reviewed by?, Japan intends to look at ways to improve the?management?of its $1.3 trillion in foreign exchange reserves. On Wednesday, the war chest was believed to be mostly held in U.S. Treasury bonds.

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

* German Ifo survey on Economics

* Micron Earnings (By Tom Westbrook, edited by Christopher Cushing).

(source: Reuters)