A look at the day ahead in European and global markets |
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By Wayne Cole, Chief Correspondent, Treasury |
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The market reaction has been relief at the election of the relatively mainstream CDU/CSU conservatives in Germany's election, with DAX futures now up 1.4% after a slow start. The euro has added 0.5% to a one-month high at $1.0528, clearing the previous top of $1.0514. The next target is $1.0534.
Conservative leader Friedrich Merz still has to form a coalition government and it is not yet clear whether he will need one or multiple partners, with the latter sure to take more time. Analysts assume a straightforward coalition with the SPD would be the most favoured outcome, but there's a lot of horse trading to come first. The German Ifo survey due later could show a pick-up in anticipation of a Merz win.
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German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, February 21, 2025. REUTERS/Staff/File Photo |
German leadership is sorely needed given question marks over President Donald Trump's support for NATO and Ukraine. European Union leaders are set to hold an extraordinary summit on March 6 to discuss additional support for Ukraine and how to pay for Europe's newly burgeoning defence requirements. This will almost certainly require more debt issuance and some relaxation of EU budget rules. Maybe they could bring back War, sorry, Defence Bonds to get patriotic retail investors involved.
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Across the Atlantic, just the threat of tariffs was enough to slam the services PMI sharply lower and it's likely to get worse with reports the White House is actually pressuring Mexico to raise its own tariffs on Chinese imports.
A jump in U.S. consumer inflation expectations to the highest since 1995 will not be welcomed by Fed policy makers, who have constantly comforted themselves with the assertion that expectations were "well anchored". There are at least nine Fed speakers this week so there's plenty of scope for verbal warnings ahead of the PCE inflation report on Friday.
Wall Street futures have at least bounced in Asian trade, perhaps on hopes Nvidia's results on Wednesday will justify its stratospheric valuation. Investors are looking for fourth-quarter sales around $38.5 billion and first-quarter guidance around $42.5 billion, while any caution on future AI capex would be a downside risk. . |
Graphics are produced by Reuters. |
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Key developments that could influence markets on Monday: |
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German Ifo survey of business for Feb, EU final CPI data
- BoE research conference where Deputy Governors Dave Ramsden and Clare Lombardelli speak, along with Bank of Canada Deputy Governor Toni Gravelle. BoE committee member Swati Dhingra speaks
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Graphics are produced by Reuters. |
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Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.
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