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Home » Finance » Stocks extend gains ahead of US inflation report

Stocks extend gains ahead of US inflation report

by PublicWire
September 13, 2022
in Finance
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Stock markets extended their gains on Tuesday and the dollar weakened, ahead of a widely anticipated US inflation report which investors will scrutinise for clues about the future path of monetary policy.

Europe’s regional Stoxx 600 added 0.3 per cent in early dealings, having climbed 1.8 per cent in the previous session, while Germany’s Dax also made small gains. In Asia, China’s mainland CSI 300 index rose 0.4 per cent and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng gained 0.2 per cent as markets in greater China reopened following a national holiday. Japan’s Topix rose 0.3 per cent.

The tentative advances for equities come as investors looked ahead to US inflation data due to be released at 1.30pm (BST). Economists polled by Reuters expect the consumer price index for August to register a reading of 8.1 per cent year on year, down from 8.5 per cent in July, with the headline figure pushed down by weaker energy prices.

But core CPI — which strips out volatile items such as energy and food — is forecast to have risen from 5.9 per cent to 6.1 per cent in the world’s largest economy.

Tuesday’s data will be assessed closely by traders ahead of the US Federal Reserve’s next monetary policy meeting in late September, with markets pricing in the probability of a third consecutive 0.75 percentage point interest rate rise by the central bank. The Fed’s current target range stands at 2.25 to 2.50 per cent.

Equity markets have fallen this year — with an FTSE gauge of global shares down 16 per cent — as the Fed and other big central banks jack up borrowing costs to curb inflation, stoking fears that such policy tightening might compound an economic slowdown.

Kristina Hooper, chief global market strategist at Invesco, said the US economy was “still fundamentally sound” but added that the Fed “has readily admitted that it will take time for the negative effects of tightening thus far to show up in the economy”.

Hooper added that the Fed “will honour its pledge of being data dependent, and there is still a good chance it could deliver only a [0.5 percentage point] hike in September”.

The dollar has weakened in recent days, while the euro has advanced on the back of a three-quarter point interest rate rise by the European Central Bank last Thursday — indicating a narrowing of policy divergence between the Fed and the ECB.

The dollar lost 0.1 per cent against a comparative basket of six other currencies on Tuesday, after sliding 0.7 per cent in the previous session.

Futures contracts tracking Wall Street’s broad S&P 500 stock index, which often advances when the dollar falls due to its weighting towards multinationals, added 0.3 per cent.

In government debt markets, the yield on the 10-year US Treasury note lost 0.03 percentage points to 3.33 per cent as its price edged higher. The equivalent German yield added 0.03 percentage points to 1.67 per cent, ahead of the release of data from economic research group Zew on investment professionals’ confidence in the country’s economy.


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