Enter your details to join our mobile app waitlist and receive early access to the Bell Direct App.
It was a mixed session on Wall Street overnight as investors focus ahead to the pivotal debt ceiling negotiation talks at 5:30pm on Monday evening in the U.S. where President Biden will meet again with house speaker Kevin McCarthy to continue debt ceiling talks with just 10-days left until the earliest date that Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said the US could default. The S&P500 rose 0.02% on Monday, the Dow Jones fell 0.42% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq rose 0.5%. Reporting season is coming to an end, but investors are still awaiting the release of first quarter earnings results out of Zoom Video, and Lowe’s. The US has also agreed to back the development of Australia’s critical minerals industry after the two country’s agreed to coordinate policies and investment to support the industry’s growth. This is a major deal for Australia’s local miners and producers as Australia supplies around half of the world’s lithium and other minerals like rare earths.
Over in Europe, markets closed mixed as investors in the region await key signs of progress toward raising the U.S. debt ceiling to avoid the catastrophic potential outcome of defaulting on debts. In Greece, the Athens General Composite Index soared 7% on Monday after the New Democracy, ruling Conservative Party, secured a firm lead in the elections on Sunday. Germany’s DAX fell 0.32% on Monday after closing at a record high on Friday, while the French CAC fell 0.18% but, in the UK, the FTSE100 rose 0.18%.
The local market closed the first trading session of the week 0.22% lower, weighed down by investors selling out of real estate and communication services stocks, which offset a 1.5% rally for the tech sector. Tyro Payments (ASX:TYR) tanked over 16% on Monday after Potentia Capital walked away from takeover talks with the payments company following Potentia’s completion of due diligence into Tyro. New regulations in the buy now, pay later sector also sent shockwaves through the share prices of key players like Zip Co (ASX:ZIP) and Block (ASX:SQ2), parent company of Afterpay. The regulations set to be imposed on the BNPL providers will include tougher requirements for credit checking to avoid consumers taking on unaffordable debt through use of the pay later options.
What to watch today:
Trading Ideas: