Stocks stuck, oil sags as US inflation and debt woes loom
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[May 10, 2023] By
Tom Westbrook and Lawrence White
SINGAPORE/LONDON (Reuters) - Stocks were lethargic and oil slid on
Wednesday ahead of U.S. consumer price data that could damage hopes for
interest rate cuts later this year, while President Joe Biden’s failure
to break a deadlock on the debt ceiling also dampened markets.
Europe's benchmark STOXX index fell 0.3%, echoing a decline in MSCI's
broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan, and S&P 500 futures
also sagged.
The sour mood in European stocks came despite uplift from the financial
sector, where expectation-beating earnings from Credit Agricole helped
banks be the top sectoral gainers on the STOXX 600.
Oil prices also sagged, ending a three-day rally, with Brent crude down
$1 as U.S. inventories rose in a possible sign of weakening demand.
April U.S. consumer price data is due at 1230 GMT and economists expect
the headline CPI to hold steady at an annual 5% and core CPI to moderate
very slightly to 5.5%, though anything stickier could confound bets
interest rates will fall.
"That's the thing that'd get taken out if CPI numbers come in on the
higher side," said ING economist Rob Carnell.
"It doesn't look particularly sensible if inflation is falling at too
slow a rate and that could feed through into higher longer-term treasury
yields as well."
Interest rate futures imply about a 60% chance the Federal Reserve cuts
rates in September, according to the CME FedWatch tool.
Treasuries were broadly steady, with brinkmanship over the approaching
U.S. debt ceiling fuelling demand for safe assets, including bonds, on
one hand, while also driving investors out of T-bills maturing in early
June.
President Joe Biden and top lawmakers failed to break a deadlock over
raising the $31.4 trillion U.S. debt limit, but vowed to meet again
before June, when the Treasury projects it will start struggling to meet
its obligations.
Benchmark 10-year yields held at 3.529%. Two-year yields were at 4.049%.
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Traders are pictured at their desks in
front of the DAX board at the stock exchange in Frankfurt, Germany
July 29, 2015. REUTERS/Remote/Pawel Kopczynski
CPI WATCH
Foreign exchange markets have been treading water while markets
weigh policymakers' rhetoric against traders' conviction that U.S.
interest rates, and the dollar, should fall.
Emerging markets currencies were subdued on Wednesday, with MSCI's
index flat as investors awaited direction from the U.S. data.
JP Morgan's G7 FX volatility index sat at a one-year low.
European Central Bank board member Isabel Schnabel said on Tuesday
expectations for rate cuts were misplaced, but that didn't give the
euro much of a boost, as traders have been reluctant to sell dollars
too hard ahead of the CPI data.
China's weak import figures for April held down Chinese and Hong
Kong stocks for a second straight session, as investors fret the
market rebound from the reopening of the economy is fading into an
uneven recovery.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell 0.5%. The Shanghai Composite dropped 1.3%
and the yuan fell to a two-week trough.
An apparent crackdown on due diligence firms is roiling the sector
and unnerving investors. Reuters reported CICC Capital, a unit of
leading Chinese investment bank China International Capital Corp
stopped using consultancy Capvision.
Brent crude futures hovered at $76.90 a barrel. Gold is starting to
settle in above $2,000 an ounce, while bitcoin steadied at $27,732.
(Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore and Jacqueline Wong)
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