ALL SECTORS FLASH GREEN IN EUROPE (0909 GMT) All sectors are ticking higher in Europe today, as the STOXX 600 soars to its highest since April 2022, boosted by the oil and gas sector , which is up 1.5% after another set of bumper results from France's Total and Norway's Equinor .
The chemicals sector is getting a helping hand from British industrial gas company Linde and Dutch paints and coatings company Akzo Nobel . Meanwhile, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell's speech is still permeating the wider market with a positive mood.
BP is providing a boost to the index on a net weighted points basis, with shares
rising 3.2% to their highest since August 2019 after the oil major reported record profits for
2022 on Tuesday.
Finnish refiner Neste is top riser, up 8.9% after the company posted comparable
fourth-quarter core operating results that beat analysts' forecasts.
Not all stocks are enjoying the optimism. Dutch payments processor Adyen's shares
are at the bottom of the index after missing analysts' expectations, while shares in
Handelsbanken are down 6.3% after the Swedish bank reported in-line profits but
higher-than-expected costs.
(Lucy Raitano)
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THE POWELL PUT (0752 GMT)
Wall Street must be hoping Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell would speak in public every
day. Given a chance to react hawkishly to the bumper January payrolls report, Powell demurred
and chose to stay boringly balanced on the rate outlook.
Asked if he regretted using "disinflation" 11 times in his media conference last week, he
said no, he would do the same again.
He reiterated the "disinflationary process" was under way, but it would likely take a
"significant" period of time and if the data kept coming in stronger than expected, the Fed
would have to do more on rates.
Hardly earth shattering stuff, but for markets these days if Powell is not all-out
in-your-face hawkish, then he's dovish. There's no middle ground. Wall Street duly rallied while
Treasury yields and the dollar have eased a little, with futures priced for just two more hikes
to 5.0-5.25%.
Meanwhile, the yen has had a good 24 hours which some put down to yesterday's report of
strong wages figures, a sea-change for a market that has spent years ignoring Japanese data
because nothing ever happened in them.
Nominal total cash earnings grew 4.8% y/y last quarter, the fastest since January 1997,
thanks to an outsized 7.6% jump in December bonuses.
Faster pay growth in the spring labour talks is seen as an essential condition for the Bank
of Japan (BOJ) to scale back its massive monetary stimulus.
Calls by Prime Minister Fumio Kishida for companies to raise wages seem to actually have had
some effect with some big names pledging large rises recently.
On Tuesday, video game maker Nintendo Co Ltd said it plans to lift workers' base pay by 10% even as it cut its profit outlook. It was rewarded today by the market knocking its shares down 8%.
Key developments that could influence markets on Wednesday: - Fed's Williams, Cook, Bostic, Barr, Kashkari and Waller all speak, with Waller and Williams likely to carry the most weight with markets - Earnings from Uber and Walt Disney, which will be the first result with Iger back in charge
(Wayne Cole)
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EUROPE EYES SOLID START AS OIL PROFITS CONTINUE TO ROLL IN (0740 GMT)
European stocks are set for a solid start with March futures contracts up 0.8%, wiping out Tuesday's losses and then some.
Some blockbuster earnings are rolling in from France. Oil major TotalEnergies posted a record adjusted net profit continuing a spate of positive earnings for the sector, which also includes the latest from Norway's Equinor .
Meanwhile France's third biggest bank Societe Generale posted higher-than-expected
profit in the fourth quarter, and another bank - Italian state-owned Monte dei Paschi di Siena - has also outdone expectations with its larger-than-expected quarterly profit.
In a speech on Tuesday, Fed chair Jerome Powell, while acknowledging that interest rates may
need to move higher, still struck a less hawkish tone than had been feared which sent stocks
higher on Wall Street overnight and on Wednesday in Asia and weighed on the dollar.
A warning signal came from the UK's largest housebuilder Barratt Developments Plc ,
after it flagged persisting market uncertainty as high mortgage rates weigh on demand and a
sharp fall in house prices dent margins.
(Lucy Raitano)
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