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US equities extended the bull market run on Wall Street overnight in a shortened session. Trading volume was muted with the New York Stock Exchange closing early a 1pm and will be closed tonight for Independence Day. The S&P500 and the Nasdaq both closed at record highs, with investors looking past soft economic data. The S&P500 gained 0.5%, while the Nasdaq closed 0.88% in the green, as mega cap tech names rallied, including Tesla and Nvidia.
European markets rallied with all major benchmarks closing in the green ahead of two national parliamentary elections, with the UK voting on Thursday followed by France on Sunday.
After a negative run last week, the STOXX600 has been volatile in July so far. The index closed 0.8% higher, with most sectors in the green, primarily lead by mining stocks. The German DAX up 1.16%, Fance’s CAC up 1.24% and the FTSE 100 advanced 0.6%.
After a choppy session on the ASX200 yesterday, the key index posted a 0.28% gain at the closing bell, as investors weighed unfavorably strong retail sales data against a tech rally, prompted by the Nasdaq hitting a record high the prior trading session. Retail sales data came in at a rise of 0.6% for May, which is significant from the 0.1% increase reported in April and well above economist expectations. The data, however, wasn’t favorable for retail companies, as it was due to heavy discounting to move inventory levels as opposed to profit making on an earnings front. Building permit data in Australia for May was also out yesterday, up 5.5%, again above expectations. Both readings show the RBA’s case at taming inflation remains a difficult task as these drivers of inflation remain high.
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