A SEA OF RED AS MINERS DRAG (0917 GMT) European stocks are a sea of red this morning, with a few less-than-stellar results weighing on the pan-regional index. A drop in mining shares is not helping either.
Basic resources stocks are languishing near the bottom of the list, with the sector down 2.3%, weighed on by mining giants Glencore and Rio Tinto which are down 2.7% and 2.6% respectively. Real estate is also faring poorly, down 1.5%, while banks are down 1.3%.
Fresenius shares are down 5% while Fresenius Medical Care shares are 10.3% higher, as the market digests the German healthcare group's latest results and reshuffle.
BE Semiconductor shares meanwhile are rising 7.5% after results.
Media names are only sector just about bucking today's downward trend, trading 0.1% higher.
(Lucy Raitano)
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NOT IF OR WHEN BUT HOW FAST? (0752 GMT)
Is it really good news? Probably yes, probably not.
Economies from the United States to Germany to Britain are showing an unexpected pick-up in
business activity, but markets are again giving a thumbs-down to these indicators.
Just as inflation once again becomes the biggest pain point for investors after they
conveniently put away such worries last month, strong growth cements the case for higher
interest rates.
Fed funds futures traders are now pricing for the Fed's benchmark overnight interest rate to
reach 5.36% in July and end the year at 5.18%.
And financial markets now point to a 95% chance of an increase in the Bank of England's
official rate next month, up from 90% early on Tuesday.
That is depressing the mood for equity traders.
Asian stock markets floated in a sea of red on Wednesday following an ugly sell-off on Wall
Street.
Ten-year U.S. Treasury yields rose to 3.966%, the highest since November. The dollar and
sterling strengthened on expectations of further rate hikes.
Inflation data from Germany and Italy due later on Wednesday will offer clues on price
pressures.
In this risk-off environment, the stage is set for the release of the minutes of the Fed's
meeting from last week.
Markets will scrutinise it for signs on how high officials project interest rates will go
following recent data that showed stronger-than-expected U.S. employment and consumer prices.
Political tensions are also heating up as President Joe Biden and Russian President
Vladimir Putin spar verbally, presenting starkly different views of the world and the Ukraine
war.
China said on Wednesday that its top diplomat, Wang Yi, met Russia's security chief and both
sides agreed that peace and stability in the Asia-Pacific region should be resolutely upheld,
and opposed the introduction of a Cold War "mentality".
On the corporate front, Bloomberg News reported that sovereign wealth fund Abu Dhabi
Investment Authority is among the parties considering a bid for a 34% stake in Associated
British Ports that could be valued at about 2 billion pounds or more.
And finally, consulting giant McKinsey & Co, which is known for advising businesses on a
variety of projects including layoffs, plans to cut about 2,000 jobs, in one of its biggest
round of layoffs, Bloomberg News reported.
Key developments that could influence markets on Wednesday:
European economic data: German and Italian Jan inflation, Germany Feb Ifo survey
European results: Iberdrola, Lloyds, Telefonica
U.S. results: eBay, Nvidia
U.S. Fed releases minutes from Jan meeting
(Anshuman Daga)
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EUROPEAN FUTURES HEAD LOWER (0734 GMT)
European futures are heading lower this morning, with those on the STOXX 50 , DAX and FTSE all down 0.3%-0.4%. U.S. futures are up by a marginal 0.1%.
The day has already kicked off with the release of Germany's latest inflation, which showed a rise of 9.2% on the year in January and a month-on-month increase of 0.5%. Italy will follow suit with CPIs at 0900 GMT.
At the open, eyes will be on Lloyds , after the UK lender reported flat annual profit for 2022 on Wednesday. In more positive news, carmaker Stellantis said on Wednesday operating profit grew 17% in the second half of last year, and Europe's biggest utility Iberdrola expects net profit to grow this year.
Post-European close, traders will be pouring over newly released minutes from the Federal
Reserve's last meeting for hints over how the central bank's tricky task is going.
(Lucy Raitano)
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