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Wall Street started the new trading week in record territory for the Nasdaq and S&P500 driven by market optimism around the AI movement and ahead of the Fed officials’ speeches later this week which could shine light on the rate cut outlook. The S&P500 ended the day up 0.77% at a record high 5473.23 points, while the Nasdaq soared to a close up 0.95% at 17,857.02 and the Dow added 0.5% to close at 38,778 snapping a four-session losing streak.
European markets closely mostly higher on Monday despite instability on a political front across a number of regions and against a clouded economic backdrop leaving investors questioning the direction of rate and inflation outlook across Europe. The STOXX600 rose 0.12% on Monday, while France’s CAC returned to positive territory ending the day up 0.9% after mixed reactions to the possibility of a political victory for the country’s far-right national party in the country’s upcoming election. In Germany the DAX rose 0.37% on Monday and, in the UK, the FTSE100 ended the down just 0.06%.
The Asia region it was all eyes on China yesterday with a slew of economic data painting a mixed economic picture out of the world’s second-largest economy’s recovery post-pandemic. China’s CSI index fell 0.15% on Monday, while Japan’s Nikkei tumbled 1.83% on a slide in energy stocks, and South Korea’s Kospi index fell 0.52% at the closing bell.
Locally on Monday, the ASX200 started the new trading week down 0.31% as a sell-off in tech and energy stocks weighed on the key index. Disappointing economic data out of China weighed on investor sentiment around the big miners yesterday while investors also fled tech stocks around concerns over the outlook of interest rates which will be announced by the RBA later this afternoon.
ANZ-Indeed data out yesterday showed Australian job advertisements fell 2.1% in May which at first glance appears supportive of a slight loosening of the country’s tight labour market, however, this slight decline keeps the job ads data 20% above pre-pandemic levels indicating the labour market remains tight, especially following the nation’s unemployment rate falling to 4% in data out last week.
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