Stock market today: World shares are mixed after rally on Wall St caps a
dismal week
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[December 23, 2024] By
ELAINE KURTENBACH
BANGKOK (AP) — World shares were mixed on Monday after U.S. stocks
capped a mostly dismal week with a broad rally that still left the
benchmark S&P 500 down 2% for the week.
One shadow over markets was cleared when U.S. lawmakers passed a budget
deal in the early hours of Saturday, narrowly averting a pre-Christmas
government shutdown.
Germany's DAX fell 0.3% to 19,830.42. The CAC 40 in Paris slid 0.3% to
7,251.05, while Britain's FTSE shed 0.2% to 8,068.17.
The future for the S&P 500 gained 0.3% while that for the Dow Jones
Industrial Average was up 0.1%.
In Asian trading, Tokyo's Nikkei 225 index jumped 1.2% to 39,161.34,
while the dollar was trading at 156.50 Japanese yen, up from 156.48 yen.
Japanese automakers Honda Motor Co. and Nissan Motor Corp. announced
Monday they had agreed to work toward a possible merger that might also
include Nissan's smaller alliance partner Mitsubishi Motors Corp.
Honda's shares, which fell after news of the talks on a deal surfaced
last week, jumped 3.8%. Nissan's, which had soared, rose1.6%.
Elsewhere in Asia, Hong Kong's Hang Seng gained 0.8% to 19,883.13, while
the Shanghai Composite index slipped 0.5% to 3,351.26.
Australia's S&P/ASX 500 jumped 1.7% to 8,201.60.
South Korea's Kospi added 1.6% to 2,442.01 and Taiwan's Taiex jumped
2.6%, with TSMC, the world's biggest computer chip maker, gaining 4.4%.
Hon Hai Precision Industry, which reportedly had been maneuvering to buy
a big stake in Nissan, jumped 3.8%.
In Bangkok, the SET advanced 1.4%.
On Friday, the S&P 500 rallied 1.1% and the Dow jumped 1.2%. The Nasdaq
composite gained 1%.
Roughly nine of every 10 stocks in the S&P 500 rose.
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A person walks in front of an electronic stock board showing Japan's
Nikkei index at a securities firm Monday, Dec. 23, 2024, in Tokyo.
(AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)
Superstar stock Nvidia and other Big
Tech companies led the market, which got a lift after a report said
a measure of inflation the Federal Reserve likes to use was slightly
lower last month than economists expected. It’s an encouraging
signal following recent reports suggesting inflation may be tough to
get all the way down to the Fed’s 2% goal from its peak above 9%.
The threat of higher inflation was one of the reasons Fed Chair
Jerome Powell gave last week when the central bank hinted it may
deliver fewer cuts to interest rates next year than it earlier
expected.
That warning sent a shock through the stock market, which had run to
57 all-time highs this year amid the widespread assumption the Fed
would deliver a string of cuts to rates into 2025. Now traders are
largely betting on one, two or perhaps even zero next year,
according to data from CME Group.
Critics had been warning stock prices were vulnerable to drops after
running so high and that the market likely needed everything to go
correctly to justify its stellar gains for the year. Besides the
diminished hopes for several rate cuts next year, Wall Street got
another reminder late Thursday that everything may not go as
expected.
The U.S. stock market has lost a chunk of its gain since Trump’s win
on Election Day, which raised hopes for faster economic growth and
more lax regulations that would boost corporate profits. Worries
have risen that Trump’s preference for tariffs and other policies
could lead to higher inflation, a bigger U.S. government debt and
difficulties for global trade.
In other dealings early Monday, U.S. benchmark crude oil picked up
24 cents to $69.70 per barrel.
Brent crude, the international standard, was up 24 cents at $73.18.
The euro fell to $1.0415 from $1.0433.
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