Morning report

Finally, Good News

The main benchmarks from Europe and the US recovered a large amount of ground as investors cheered regional and international CPI data. US CPI was lower-than-expected, while the UK’s CPI showed signs of slowing down, prompting investors to put bets on more rate cuts to take place this year. ​​​​​​​

Wall Street makes back ground following CPI data

Wall Street’s main three benchmarks rose sharply following lower-than-expected December CPI data. Investors cheered the +3.2% rise compared to the +3.3% expectation. As a result, the NASDAQ added +2.1%, the S&P 500 increased +1.6%, and the DOW rose +1.5%. Traders are now hopeful of at least two rate cuts by the end of this year, with the first taking place in July. Investors were also relieved by a ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas, the potential first step in ending the 15-month long war. JPMorgan Chase rose +1.4% after it posted record annual profit in the fourth quarter of 2024. Wells Fargo jumped +6.1% after it beat the Street in profit as well. Goldman took on +4.8% after it posted its best quarterly profit since 2021, while Citi notched a profit in the fourth quarter, raising its stock price +5.6%. BlackRock jumped +3.8% after its assets under management reached a record US$11.6 trillion in the fourth quarter. In rates markets, the US two-year treasury bond yield fell -8 bp to 4.28% while the US 10-year slumped -12 bp to 4.67%. ​​​​​​​

European stocks take clues from regional and international CPI data

The Stoxx 600 jumped +1.3% while London’s FTSE 100 increased +1.2%. The UK CPI data release showed an annual increase of +2.5% in December, a touch lower than November’s +2.6%. As a result, traders are pricing in more BoE rate cuts during this year. In stocks, Hays rose +1.7% after the recruiter reported another drop in its quarterly fees. Serco increased +1.6% after it won a contract from the US Army valued at US$247 million. Nordex, the German wind turbine manufacturer, rose +1.8% after it said it has increased its gigawatt order intake by more than +10% in 2024.

Mixed results in Australasia sees majority lose in the region

The ASX 200 fell -0.2% ahead of US inflation data. Fortescue rode the iron ore price gain, adding +1.8%. Transurban fell -0.9% and CSL lost -1.2% following target price reductions from brokerages. New Zealand’s own NZX 50 increased +0.5%. In Asia, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng was the only benchmark to turn over into the green, adding +0.3%. Korea’s Kospi remained relatively flat (-0.0%), while Japan’s Nikkei 225 edged -0.1% down. China’s Shanghai Composite fell -0.4% while its CSI 300 lost a larger -0.6%. ​​​​​​​

WTI Crude, Gold, and Iron Ore all up

WTI Crude increased +2.5% to US$79.44/bbl, Gold rose +0.5% to US$2,691.88/oz, Iron Ore increased +1.3% to US$99.99/MT.