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Stocks and US yields increase after sanctions against Russia

Stocks and US yields increase after sanctions against Russia

The oil prices rose more than 5% Thursday, after Washington announced sanctions against major Russian companies for the Ukraine War. Major stock indexes also rose as gains by U.S. energy stocks and European energy shares offset some disappointing earnings reports. The sanctions were announced on Wednesday night and targeted major Russian suppliers Rosneft, Lukoil. The European Union approved the 19th set of sanctions against Moscow, which included a ban on Russian gas imports. Britain imposed sanctions on Rosneft & Lukoil last week.

Wall Street stocks rose with indexes picking up momentum following the White House

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Next week, Donald Trump will visit Asia and meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

The S&P 500 index saw energy as the sector that gained the most, with a gain of 1.6%.

Stocks also benefited from a number of positive earnings reports. Honeywell shares gained 7.6% following the company's revised profit forecast for 2025. International Business Machines' shares dropped 1.2% as the company reported a slowdown of growth in its cloud software segment.

"In general the (stock market) is responding to earnings which are for the most part continuing to be good. The market is also applauding Trump's severe sanctions against major Russian oil companies. "You can see it in the energy industry," said Peter Cardillo. Chief market economist at Spartan Capital Securities, New York.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose by 185.84, or 0.39 percent, to 46.774.16, while the S&P 500 gained 47.28, or 0.70 percent, to 6,746.56, and the Nasdaq Composite advanced by 239.21, or 1.05 per cent, to 22,979.60.

The MSCI index of global stocks rose by 5.10 points or 0.51% to 995.87.

STOXX 600 index closes at record high, boosted by gains in energy shares. The pan-European STOXX 600 Index advanced 0.37%, reaching 574.43. Kering shares rose 8.7%, also helping to boost sentiment. The Gucci owner revealed that sales for the previous quarter were lower than analysts expected.

Chinese stocks recovered from a drop of 1.1% to close at 0.3%. Sources said that the White House is considering a plan of reducing software exports to China as a retaliation to Beijing's recent round of export restrictions on rare earths.

After the latest Russia sanction news, oil futures became a hot topic. The U.S. announced it was ready to take additional action, as it called upon Moscow to immediately agree to a ceasefire. U.S. crude rose 5.6% to $61.79 per barrel. Brent closed at $65.93 last up 5.4%.

U.S. Treasury Yields rose as well following the news of sanctions, and investors prepared for Friday's key inflation reading in the United States.

The yield on the benchmark U.S. 10 year notes increased 4.2 basis points from 3.953% at late Wednesday.

Geopolitical risks have renewed demand for gold as a safe-haven, after it had dropped earlier this week following its recent strong rally. Spot gold increased 1.04% to $4136.34 per ounce.

Investors' firm belief that the Federal Reserve is going to continue cutting U.S. rates of interest helps offset some of their anxiety over geopolitical tensions and trade conflicts.

dollar

The index that measures the dollar against a basket including the yen, the euro and other currencies rose by 0.06%, to 98.99. In recent months, the index has been moving higher as investors became more confident that the Fed would act to protect the economic system. The yen fell to its lowest level in a week. The dollar gained 0.41% against the Japanese yen to reach 152.6.

(source: Reuters)