XM无法为美国居民提供服务。

Stocks buoyant as Sweden cuts, oil skids



<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><head><title>MORNING BID AMERICAS-Stocks buoyant as Sweden cuts, oil skids</title></head><body>

A look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike Dolan

Wall Street looks to have brushed off the latest hawkish Federal Reserve noises and Disney's outsize swoon, with European bourses stalking new records as Sweden becomes the latest G10 central bank to cut interest rates and oil prices plunged.

Stocks futures and Treasury yields held pretty steady overnight even after Minneapolis Fed chief and known hawk Neel Kashkari said all policy options were on the table in getting inflation back in the bottle.

"If we need to hold rates where they are for an extended period of time to tap the brakes on the economy, or if we even needed to raise, we would do what we needed to do to get inflation back down," Kashkari said.

Perhaps seen as a outlier and not even a voting member of the Fed's policymaking committee this year, markets appeared to bat the comments away.

Helped by brisk demand for the hefty $58 billion sale of three-year notes on Tuesday and another sharp fall in crude oil prices, Treasury yields were relatively calm going into a $42 billion 10-year auction later on Wednesday.

Crude oil prices CLc1 fell to their lowest since March 11 as industry data showed a pile-up of U.S. inventories - a sign of weakening demand - and cautious supply expectations emerged ahead of an OPEC+ policy meeting next month.

U.S. crude stocks rose by 509,000 barrels in the week ended May 3, sources said, citing American Petroleum Institute figures, and gasoline and distillate inventories also rose. Official U.S. government data is due later in the day.

And European bourses looked set for record highs as Sweden cut interest rates on Wednesday and underlined the divergence between European central banks policymaking and the Fed's.

Sweden's central bank cut its key interest rate to 3.75% from 4.00% as expected and said it was likely to cut the rate two more times in the second half of the year if the outlook for inflation still holds.

After eight rate hikes in Sweden, inflation is now close to the Riksbank's 2% target after peaking at over 10%.

The Riksbank is the second of the major G10 central banks to ease, with the Swiss National Bank jumping the gun in March.

And crucially, the crown SEK=, EURSEK= weakened only marginally.

With the European Central Bank now widely expected to cut rates next month, attention turns to Thursday's Bank of England meeting. Although no UK move is expected this week, there's considerable speculation the BoE may open the door for a rate cut in June too.

Britain's benchmark FTSE 100 .FTSE hit a new record high on Tuesday, 10-year gilt yields GB10YT=RR fell to their lowest in almost four weeks and the pound GBP= slipped.

The overall picture kept the dollar buoyed generally .DXY - especially against the ailing Japanese yen. Dollar/yen JPY= climbed back above 155 despite fresh warnings from Japanese authorities of repeat intervention to sells dollars.

Asian stocks bucked the U.S. and European trend and wobbled across the board earlier, with Tokyo, Shanghai and Hong Kong all ending in the red.

Back on Wall Street, Tuesday's gains and steady overnight futures survived another retreat in Tesla and Walt Disney's DIS.N 10% slump. Disney fell as a surprise profit in its streaming entertainment division was eclipsed by a drop in its traditional TV business and weaker box office.

Shares in electric-pickup maker Rivian RIVN.O fell about 5% in out-of-hours trade overnight as it stuck to a 2024 production forecast well below Wall Street targets and reported a wider-than-expected first-quarter loss as it ended a weeks-long manufacturing halt.


Key diary items that may provide direction to U.S. markets later on Wednesday:

* Federal Reserve Vice Chair Philip Jefferson, Fed Board Governor Lisa Cook and Boston Fed President Susan Collins speak

* US corporate earnings: Uber, News Corp, Airbnb, Emerson Electric, Corpay, Celanese, Atmos Energy, NiSource, STERIS, Broadridge Financial Solutions

* Chinese President Xi Jinping in Serbia and Hungary as part of week-long visit to Europe

* US Treasury auctions $42 billion of 10-year notes


US crude oil price skid to near 2-month low https://reut.rs/3wudbCD

Sweden cuts interest rates https://reut.rs/3V0Fget

Sweden joins the race to cut rates https://reut.rs/3WzLzGO

China's currency tests the weak end of its trading band https://reut.rs/3wxFY9h

Entertainment segment profit helps Disney's streaming unit narrow losses https://reut.rs/3UKXD6N


By Mike Dolan, editing by Nick Macfie mike.dolan@thomsonreuters.com

</body></html>

免责声明: XM Group仅提供在线交易平台的执行服务和访问权限,并允许个人查看和/或使用网站或网站所提供的内容,但无意进行任何更改或扩展,也不会更改或扩展其服务和访问权限。所有访问和使用权限,将受下列条款与条例约束:(i) 条款与条例;(ii) 风险提示;以及(iii) 完整免责声明。请注意,网站所提供的所有讯息,仅限一般资讯用途。此外,XM所有在线交易平台的内容并不构成,也不能被用于任何未经授权的金融市场交易邀约和/或邀请。金融市场交易对于您的投资资本含有重大风险。

所有在线交易平台所发布的资料,仅适用于教育/资讯类用途,不包含也不应被视为用于金融、投资税或交易相关咨询和建议,或是交易价格纪录,或是任何金融商品或非应邀途径的金融相关优惠的交易邀约或邀请。

本网站上由XM和第三方供应商所提供的所有内容,包括意见、新闻、研究、分析、价格、其他资讯和第三方网站链接,皆保持不变,并作为一般市场评论所提供,而非投资性建议。所有在线交易平台所发布的资料,仅适用于教育/资讯类用途,不包含也不应被视为适用于金融、投资税或交易相关咨询和建议,或是交易价格纪录,或是任何金融商品或非应邀途径的金融相关优惠的交易邀约或邀请。请确保您已阅读并完全理解,XM非独立投资研究提示和风险提示相关资讯,更多详情请点击 这里

风险提示: 您的资金存在风险。杠杆商品并不适合所有客户。请详细阅读我们的风险声明