PARIS (Reuters) – The main European scholarships are expected to fall back on Monday at the opening of a week rich in monetary policy events, in a context of uncertainty around American politics.
The term contracts suggest an opening of 1.07% for the Parisian CAC 40, against 0.42% for the FTSE in London, 0.69% for the Dax in Frankfurt, and 0.99% for the Stoxx 600 .
The Federal Reserve will meet on Wednesday, followed Thursday by the European Central Bank.
These two meetings should act the spacing between European and American monetary policies, the Fed having to opt for the status quo, while the sluggish activity in the euro zone pleads for a relaxation of monetary conditions.
Investors will be attentive to the declarations of central bankers on the impact of the measures taken by Donald Trump on price dynamics and growth.
American policy will continue to be closely followed while February 1 approaches, the date from which many customs duties could be set up against the trade partners of the United States.
The results season also continues on both sides of the Atlantic, the figures for Meta Platforms, Tesla, Amazon.com, Microsoft, Apple or LVMH being expected in the coming days.
The values ​​to follow:
A Wall Street
The New York Stock Exchange finished decreased on Friday while investors digest a series of economic data and mixed results before a week in charge of financial accounts and the meeting of the Federal Reserve.
The Dow Jones index sold 0.32%, or 140.82 points, to 44,424.25 points.
The larger Standard & Poor’s 500 lost 17.47 points, or 0.29% to 6,101.24 points.
The Nasdaq Composite fell on its side of 99.377 points, or 0.5% to 19,954.301 points.
Over the week, the S&P 500 won 1.74%, the NASDAQ 1.65%and the DOW 2.15%.
In Asia
Japanese clues hesitated under pressure from the technological sector. The Nikkei index lost 0.92% to 39,565.80 points. The wider topix took 0.26% to 2,758.07 points.
Advantest sold 8.5%.
Support measures for actions decided by Beijing support the Chinese indices. The Hong Kong Hang Seng index increased by 0.98%, the SSE composite of Shanghai by 0.48%, the CSI 300 of 0.19%.
Changes
The dollar fell after Donald Trump abolished the customs duties imposed against Colombia, the country having agreed to accommodate migrants expelled from the United States.
The dollar earns 0.28% against a basket of reference currencies, the euro crosses 0.3% to 1.0461 dollars, and the pound sterling lost 0.19% to 1.2455 dollars.
In Asia, the yen declines 0.05% to 156.06 yen for a dollar, the Australian dollar yields 0.36% to 0.6286 dollars.
RATE
Yields fell after the United States has returned to customs duties imposed on Colombia.
The ten -year -old Treasury yield declines from 3.8 pb to 4.5849%, while the two -year title yield abandons 2.1 pb to 4.2505%.
OIL
The barrel fell back, Donald Trump having once again asked OPEC countries to accept a drop in prices.
The Brent fell 0.87% to $ 77.82 per barrel, the American light crude (West Texas Intermediate, WTI) weakens 0.92% to 73.97 dollars.
(Written by Corentin Chappron, edited by Augustin Turpin)
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