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MORNING BID EUROPE - Chip away

MORNING BID EUROPE - Chip away
MORNING BID EUROPE - Chip away

Rae Wee gives us a look at what the European and global markets will be like tomorrow.

Global chip losses continued into Friday. While South Korean stocks were spared due to a holiday, Taiwanese and Japanese shares took the brunt. Even TSMC's 77% higher than expected earnings the day before failed to impress investors as the shares of the Taiwanese chips manufacturing giant fell 4%.

The movements across Asia have set Europe up for an uncertain start. The EUROSTOXX Futures fell?0.9% while the DAX Futures dropped 0.6%.

Investors have begun to pull back from the semiconductor market after a strong year. Concerns over AI spending are now at the forefront. The over-subscription of CXMT's initial public offering of $8.6 billion reflects investor caution. It is lower than the majority of recent Chinese IPOs. Donald Trump, the U.S. president, declassified on Thursday intelligence that he claimed showed Chinese interference in U.S. election, renewing his long-running attack on election security, despite an U.S. Intelligence Assessment that found no proof Beijing affected the 2020 votes that he lost. The markets appeared to dismiss his claims, but Trump’s harsh language towards China could rock a relationship that had been stabilised following last year’s costly trade conflict.

Trump hopes to have a meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping about?improving the trade relations in September. Iran said it had launched a new?attack on U.S. military installations in the Gulf, after the sixth night of U.S. strikes on Iranian military sites. China's foreign exchange regulator announced on Friday that it will allocate fresh quotas to qualified institutional investors for their overseas investments. This follows a recent crackdown on illegal capital flows.

The following are the key?events? that could impact markets on Friday: - U.S. industrial production, housing data and import prices

Earnings of companies including Swedbank and Danske Bank. Sweco and Volvo. Burberry Group.

Reopening the 1-month, 3-month, and 6-month UK Government Debt Auctions

(source: Reuters)