Tech
European Stocks Rebound as Tech Sector Leads Gains: Markets Wrap
(Bloomberg) — European stocks snapped two days of declines, with technology leading the advance amid hopes that US curbs on chip equipment sales to China may prove lighter than feared.
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Additional curbs the US is weighing on sales of semiconductor equipment and AI memory chips to China would stop short of some stricter measures previously considered, Bloomberg News reported. The Stoxx 600 index climbed 0.4%, propelled by semiconductor-linked stocks including ASML Holding NV, VAT Group AG and Aixtron SE.
US equity futures ticked higher, with no cash trading later due to the Thanksgiving holiday. Trading in Treasuries is shut.
Political turmoil in France weighed on the nation’s stocks and bonds, with 3% yields on benchmark French bonds matching those of Greece for the first time on record. The nation’s stocks are set for their worst under-performance against European peers since 2010 as a budget standoff threatens to topple the government.
While French bonds rallied after Finance Minister Antoine Armand said he is prepared to make concessions on the 2025 budget, that did little to shore up months of underperformance.
“The problem with France is it’s one of the largest issuers in Europe and now you’ve got a bit of a buyers’ strike,” Jordan Rochester, head of macro strategy at Mizuho International, said in an interview with Bloomberg TV. “Our head of EGB trading was just in France recently talking to investors, and their interest in buying OATs was extremely low. You’ve got other options, Italy and Spain, and their data’s actually fantastic.”
On the monetary policy front, a pick-up in the Federal Reserve’s preferred gauge of underlying inflation is reinforcing the case for policymakers to proceed gradually with further interest-rate cuts. Traders are also weighing the expected impact of Donald Trump’s administration picks, with the US president-elect’s policies expected to reinforce price pressures.
“When you look at PCE coming out yesterday, core services came out quite strong,” said Kevin Thozet, a member of the investment committee at Carmignac. “We are not heading for double-digit inflation but the disinflationary trend is stalling. The result of the US elections could prolong this cycle with tax cuts.”
The yen weakened to moderate Wednesday’s gain of more than 1% against the greenback which drove it to the strongest since late October. The move came amid views that the Bank of Japan may raise interest rates at its December meeting.