STOXX SEEN HIGHER AS BETS RISE FED READY TO STOP HIKING (0610 GMT)
European futures are trading higher as investors welcome cooler-than-anticipated U.S. inflation data, which stoked expectations that the Federal Reserve's monetary tightening cycle will end next month with one last interest rate hike. Data showed on Wednesday that U.S. consumer prices barely rose in March as the cost of gasoline declined. Minutes from the Fed's March meeting also showed some policymakers considered pausing hikes, before agreeing to last month's 25 basis point rise, amid concerns on whether bank wobbles would cause a broader tightening in credit. FTSE futures are lagging after data showed the British economy failed to grow as expected in February, as strikes over the course of the month hit output. In terms of corporate news, LVMH , the world's largest luxury company, reported a 17% rise in first-quarter sales, more than double analysts' expectations, as China rebounded sharply after COVID-19 lockdowns.
(Joice Alves)
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EURO(PE) IS ON A ROLL (0607 GMT) The euro emerged as the clearest winner of slowing U.S. inflation and a watchful Fed. The common currency climbed 0.7% on Wednesday and was still going at $1.10 in the Asian morning. It is up seven weeks in a row - the longest winning streak since the latter stages of 2020 when the dollar was falling and global markets were in a stimulus-soaked euphoria. The thinking goes that inflation will keep Europe's central bankers more hawkish than their U.S. counterparts, although perhaps not by much. Europe's blue-chip stocks also hit their highest in 22 years on Wednesday. Sterling is riding similar tailwinds. Earnings this week could test the dollar's downtrend as markets look for signals on consumer behaviour and signs of tightening credit. A surprise leap in Chinese exports in March may well suggest a global economy that's stronger than previously thought. British GDP and Tesco earnings later today offer another window on that, as will European industrial output and U.S. producer price data. In Asia on Thursday, news of SoftBank selling out of Alibaba weighed on Hong Kong shares, as did the cratering stock price of property developer Sunac upon its resumption of trade after more than a year-long suspension.
Australian jobs surprised to the upside, and traders largely shrugged off another North Korean missile launch. But the minutes from last month's Fed meeting, which was held in an atmosphere of heightened fears over bank stability, suggested that policymakers' next moves will depend on credit conditions - and this will put more attention than usual on big U.S. bank earnings reports when they come out on Friday. In a note titled "The Home Stretch", Goldman Sachs' chief economist Jan Hatzius is sticking with an out-of-consensus call that a U.S. recession is not a foregone conclusion, noting that bank crisis risks have receded considerably in the past month. Friday will bring some colour on the situation from Citi, Wells Fargo and JP Morgan Chase, although the focus remains on regionals. Earlier in the week, shares fell at the Bank of South Carolina after it noted thin margins and "precipitous increases in our deposit costs to meet the intense competition amongst banks, brokerages, and the U.S. Treasury." Bitcoin, meanwhile, marches on, scaling $30,000 this week for the first time since last summer.
Key developments that could influence markets on Thursday: Tesco earnings, British Feb GDP, Eurozone industrial output, U.S. jobless claims and PPI
(Tom Westbrook)
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