by Bertrand de Meyer

PARIS (Reuters) – The main European scholarships are expected to decrease on Monday at the opening before a week loaded between geopolitical tensions and monetary policy decisions.

According to the first indications available, the Parisian CAC 40 could lose 0.15% at the opening.

The term contracts report a drop of 0.19% for the Dax in Frankfurt, 0.05 for the FTSE in London and 0.09% for the Stoxx 600.

Iranian missiles struck Tel Aviv and Haifa in Israel on Monday, fueling the concerns of the world leaders who fear seeing the conflict between Iran and Israel extend to the Middle East while the clashes have already intensified at the end of the week.

Regarding the conflict in Ukraine and Russia, Donald Trump will have an interview with his Ukrainian counterpart at the G7 summit in Canada, said a White House official.

In addition to the consequences of world conflicts, investors will be attentive this week to the various monetary policy decisions worldwide.

The American Federal Reserve (FED) is due to announce its monetary policy decision on Wednesday, while the consequences for the inflation of the American president’s trade policies are worried.

The Bank of Japan (BOJ) begins its two -day monetary policy meeting on its side on Monday, while a wave of decision is expected during the week in Europe, ranging from the Bank of England (BOE) to the Bank of Sweden.

The values ​​to follow:

Luca de Meo, managing director of Renault, will leave the car manufacturer on July 15 and should join, according to Le Figaro, Kering to become the Director General.

A Wall Street

The New York Stock Exchange ended up sharply on Friday after Iran led missile fire on Israel in retaliation for Israeli attacks on its territory, targeting nuclear sites and factories and ramps of ballistic missiles.

The Dow Jones index sold 1.79%, or 769.83 points, to 42,197.79 points.

The larger Standard & Poor’s 500 lost 68.29 points, or 1.13% to 5,976.97 points.

The Nasdaq Composite fell on its side of 255.66 points, or 1.30% to 19,406.826 points.

Airline companies have plunged. Delta Air Lines lost 3.8%, United Airlines dropped by 4.4%and American Airlines sold 4.9%.

Conversely, the defense sector has climbed, with Lockheed Martin, RTX Corporation and Northrop Grumman earning all 3%.

In Asia

The Tokyo Stock Exchange takes 1.22%, a lower yen supporting exporting companies and general feeling.

In China, investors digest mixed data published Monday reflecting in particular a drop in industrial production in May.

The Hong Kong Hang Seng index increased by 0.15%, the SSE Composite of Shanghai is strengthened by 0.21%, the CSI 300 scored an increase of 0.1%.

RATE

American yields are in small increases before the Fed monetary policy decision this week.

Treasury’s yield at ten years takes 0.2 pb to 4.4264%, while the two -year title yield increased from 1.3 pb to 3.9707%.

Changes

The dollar is stable in front of a basket of reference currencies, the euro crosses 0.01% to 1.1551 dollars, and the pound sterling loses 0.01% to 1.3563 dollars

In Asia, the yen declines 0.01% to 144.1 yen for a dollar, the Australian dollar rises from 0.08% to 0.6491 dollars.

OIL

Oil prices are still on the rise on Monday with tensions between Israel and Iran and after taking 7% on Friday.

Brent increased by $ 1.01% to $ 74.98 per barrel and light American crude (West Texas Intermediate, WTI) adds to 1.26% to 73.9 dollars.

(Written by Bertrand de Meyer, edited by Blandine Hénault)

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