Tag Archives: World Markets

European markets open to close; data, news and earnings

LONDON — European stocks moved higher on Tuesday as positive sentiment continues in the final trading days of 2022.

Germany’s DAX climbed by around 0.8% in early trade, while France’s CAC 40 was up around 0.9% and Italy’s FTSE MIB around 0.7%. The U.K.’s FTSE index is closed Tuesday for a public holiday.

Sector-wise, autos and chemicals both added 1.6% to lead gains as most sectors traded in positive territory.

Stocks in Europe received a boost from their counterparts in Asia-Pacific after China officially announced overnight that it will end quarantine for inbound travelers on Jan. 8 — symbolizing an end to the zero-Covid policy that it has held for nearly three years. Health officials are slated to hold a press briefing on Covid at 3 p.m. Beijing time.

The Shanghai Composite rose 1% and the Shenzhen Component gained 0.9% on the news while markets in Hong Kong, Australia and New Zealand were closed for the Christmas holiday.

Stateside, U.S. stock futures rose on Tuesday morning as investors looked to see whether a Santa Claus rally will appear before year-end.

Friday marked the start of the time period for a Santa Claus rally, which is typically considered the final five-day trading stretch in the current year, as well as the first two trading days in the new year. Markets were closed Monday for the Christmas holiday.

There are no major earnings or data releases in Europe on Tuesday.

— CNBC’s Sarah Min and Jihye Lee contributed to this market report.

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Meat bans and ‘un-Brexit’? One bank’s ‘outrageous’ 2023 predictions

Meat bans, soaring gold prices and Britain voting to ‘un–Brexit’ could be on the cards for 2023, according to Saxo’s Outrageous Predictions.

Bloomberg / Contributor / Getty Images

Saxo Bank’s “outrageous predictions” for 2023 include a ban on meat production, skyrocketing gold prices and Britain voting to “un-Brexit.”

The Danish bank’s annual report, published earlier this month, expects global economies to shift into “war economy” mode, “where sovereign economic gains and self-reliance trump globalisation.”

The forecasts, while not representative of the bank’s official views, looked at how decisions from policymakers next year could impact both the global economy and the political agenda.

Gold to hit $3,000

Among the bank’s “outrageous” calls for next year, Saxo Head of Commodity Strategy Ole Hansen predicted the price of spot gold could exceed $3,000 per ounce in 2023 – around 67% higher than its current price of about $1,797 per ounce.

The report puts its forecasted surge down to three factors: “an increasing war economy mentality” that makes gold more appealing than foreign reserves, a big investment in new national security priorities, and increasing global liquidity as policymakers try to avoid debt debacles in their respective recessions.

“I would not be surprised to see commodity driven economies wanting to go to gold because of a lack of better alternatives,” Steen Jakobsen, chief investment officer at Saxo, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Dec. 6.

“I think gold is going to fly,” he added.

While analysts are expecting an increase in the price of gold in 2023, a surge of that magnitude is unlikely, according to global commodities intelligence company CRU.

“Our price expectations are much more moderate,” Kirill Kirilenko, a senior analyst at CRU, told CNBC.

“A less hawkish Fed is likely to lead to a weaker USD, which could in turn give gold bulls more breathing space and energy to stage a rally next year, lifting prices closer to $1,900 per ounce,” he said. 

Kirilenko highlighted, however, that it’s all dependent on moves by the Federal Reserve. “Any hint of increasing ‘hawkishness’ from the US central bank would likely pressure gold prices lower,” he said.

Britain will vote to un-Brexit

The “outrageous prediction” most likely to occur next year, according to Saxo’s Jakobsen, is for there to be another referendum on Brexit.

“I actually think it’s one of the things that will have a high probability,” he told CNBC.

Saxo Market Strategist Jessica Amir said British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and his Finance Minister Jeremy Hunt may take Conservative Party ratings to “unheard-of lows” as their “brutal fiscal programme throws the UK into a crushing recession.” 

This, the bank forecasted, could prompt the English and Welsh public to rethink the Brexit vote, with younger voters leading the way, and force Sunak to call a general election.

Saxo predicts there could be another Brexit referendum on the cards for Britain.

NurPhoto / Contributor / Getty Images

Saxo’s Amir said the opposition Labour party may then win the election and promise a referendum to reverse Brexit for Nov. 1, with the “re-join” vote winning.

“Business people are saying the only thing they’ve gained from Brexit is U.K-specific GDPR,” Saxo’s Jakobsen told CNBC. “The rest is just increased red tape,” he said.

Anand Menon, director of the think tank UK in a changing Europe, said this prediction “just doesn’t compute.”

“I don’t think there will be another referendum and the idea that [Labour leader Keir] Starmer would adopt that position is for the birds,” he said.

Starmer told a business conference in September that his party would “make Brexit work.”

Public sentiment toward Brexit has changed since the referendum, Menon said, after the vote resulted in a slim majority of 52% of voters opting to leave the EU back in 2016.

“It’s absolutely the case that public opinion seems to be turning,” he said. 

Research carried out by YouGov in November showed 59% of the 6,174 people surveyed thought Brexit had gone “fairly badly” or “very badly” since the end of 2020, while only 2% said it had gone “very well.”

Meat production to be banned

Meat is responsible for 57% of emissions from food production, according to research published by Nature Food, and with countries across the world having made net-zero commitments, Saxo says it is possible at least one country could cut out meat production entirely.

One nation “looking to front-run others” on its climate credentials may decide to heavily tax meat from 2025 and could ban all domestically produced live animal-sourced meat entirely by 2030, Saxo Market Strategist Charu Chanana said.

Meat is responsible for 57% of emissions from food production, according to research published by Nature Food.

Future Publishing / Contributor / Getty Images

“I wouldn’t be surprised to see schools in Denmark and Sweden banning meat altogether, it’s definitely going that way,” Saxo’s Jakobsen told CNBC. “It sounds crazy for us old people,” he added.

The U.K., countries in the European Union, Japan and Canada are among the nations with legally binding net-zero pledges.

The U.K’s Department for Environment Food and Rural Agriculture said there were “no plans” to introduce a meat tax or ban meat production when contacted by CNBC.

An eventful 2023?

Some of the other “outrageous predictions” for next year from Saxo include the resignation of French President Emmanuel Macron, Japan pegging the yen to the U.S. dollar at a rate of 200 and the formation of a united European Union military.

The predictions should all be taken with a pinch of salt, however. Saxo’s Jakobsen told CNBC that there was a 5-10% chance of each forecast coming true.

The bank has made a set of “outrageous predictions” each year for the last decade and some have actually come true — or at least come close.

In 2015, Saxo forecasted that the U.K. would vote to leave the European Union following a United Kingdom Independence Party landslide, it predicted Germany would enter a recession in 2019 – which the country narrowly avoided – and it wagered that bitcoin would experience a meteoric rally in 2017.

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Asia-Pacific markets mixed as Japan stocks see second day of losses

Indonesia to ban bauxite exports starting June 2023

India’s central bank chief warns that the next financial crisis will come from private cryptocurrencies

The next financial crisis will come from private cryptocurrencies, Shaktikanta Das, India’s central bank governor said on Wednesday.

Speaking at the BFSI Insight Summit 2022 organized by Business Standard, Das said he stands firm that cryptocurrencies should be prohibited, adding that it has no underlying value and poses risks for macroeconomic and financial stability.

Bitcoin was last higher by about 0.24% at $16,840, according to Coin Metrics. Ether rose 14% to $1,211.77.

— Charmaine Jacob

Japan’s 2-year yield briefly tops zero for first time since 2015

The yield on 2-year Japanese government bonds briefly rose above zero for the first time since 2015 in Wednesday morning trade. The note gained 2.7 basis points to stand just below the flatline.

Japan’s 2-year yield rises above zero for the first time since 2015

The yield on the 10-year JGB jumped more than 3 basis points to stand at 0.451%, also reaching 2015 highs, while the yield on the 30-year JGB inched up 2 basis points to trade at 1.6%.

Yields move inversely to price, and a basis point is equal to 0.01%.

— Jihye Lee

HKEX launches New York office in boost to expand international reach

Hong Kong’s stock exchange operator launched its New York office in a bid to expand its international reach and grow its global client base.

The new office of the Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Limited (HKEX) will be promoting its connectivity with Mainland China’s markets and its liquid primary and secondary cash markets, it said.

“At HKEX, we are fully focused on supporting the growth ambitions of our customers around the globe,” said HKEX CEO Nicolas Aguzin.

“We look forward to deepening our relationships with investors, companies and risk managers across the region, connecting capital with opportunities and East with West,” he added.

About 41% of Hong Kong’s cash equities market trading turnover are attributed to international investors. HKEX currently has offices in Beijing, Shanghai and Singapore. 

— Lee Ying Shan

Bank stocks in Tokyo rise again as wider index falls

Japanese yen at strongest in more than four months

The Japanese yen strengthened further overnight, after the Bank of Japan announced to widen its yield curve control band.

The currency strengthened by more than 5% against the Australian dollar and the New Zealand dollar – while it strengthened past 3% against the U.S. dollar.

The yen strengthened after the Bank of Japan announced to expand its yield curve control band

CNBC Pro: Fund manager says a recession is ‘imminent’ — and names cheap stocks to play it

Market watchers are increasingly worried about a looming recession and fund manager Steven Glass is no exception.

Against this backdrop, he says he’s focusing on companies with earnings visibility that are trading at attractive valuations.

His picks include a Big Tech name that he said is “extremely cheap” with “huge margin potential.”

Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Zavier Ong

Stocks hold onto gains, snap 4-day loss streak

Stocks eked out a gain Tuesday, snapping a four-day streak of losses.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 92.47 points, or 0.28%, to close at 32,850.01. The S&P 500 gained 0.11% to 3,821.73, while the Nasdaq Composite ticked up 0.01% to close at 10,547.11.

—Carmen Reinicke

Bank of Japan is more hawkish sooner-than-expected, signals

The Bank of Japan’s surprise policy shift sent interest rates rising globally, as investors reacted to more evidence central bankers around the world will continue to pressure interest rates higher.

“It was definitely a surprise. I don’t think there was anyone out there who expected it,” said Ben Jeffrey, rate strategist at BMO. The Japanese central bank moved sooner-than-expected to tighten policy. The BOJ changed its yield curve policy to allow the yield on the 10-year Japanese government bond to move 50 basis poins either side of its zero target rate, up from 25 basis points.

The announcement drove rates higher around the world, as yields on Japanese government bonds (JGBs) rose to 7-year highs. Rates move opposite yield. The U.S. 10-year jumped o 3.68%.

“They were definitely the last one standing in terms of being dovish, and now they’re still dovish but less so,” said Jeffrey. “It’s obviously bearish JGBs and fixed income globally, but in the longer term it should help the yen which will make Treasurys more attractive to Japanese investors next year.”

–Patti Domm

Expect a more challenging environment ahead, says Atlantic Equities

Atlantic Equities analysts are anticipating a more challenging backdrop for the global consumer in 2023.

“Inflation may well have peaked on a headline basis but input costs still remain elevated and companies will be looking to at least hold if not take further pricing in some cases,” analyst Edward Lewis said in a note Tuesday. “That may become more challenging as levels of elasticity are beginning to normalize with U.S. retailers starting to push back against pricing, in line with where European peers have been all year.”

He highlighted Coca-Cola and Pepsi as some of his favorite consumer picks, citing “category momentum, ongoing investment and strong execution supporting elevated growth.”

— Tanaya Macheel

Stock market has shed $11.7 trillion so far this year

It’s been a rough year for stocks, which are currently in a bear market and down year to date.

From the market’s yearly high on January 3 to this morning, U.S. stocks have shed $11.7 trillion in market cap, according to data from Bespoke Group.

“The max drawdown was $13.6 trillion at the low on 9/30, so we’ve seen market cap increase by just under $2 trillion since then,” analysts wrote Tuesday. “In dollar terms, this drawdown has been more extreme than anything investors have ever experienced. That’s pretty deflationary if you ask us!”

Of the $11.7 trillion, more than $5 trillion in losses come from just five companies – Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet, Meta and Tesla.

—Carmen Reinicke

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Japanese yen strengthens as central bank widens yield target range, Asia markets fall

Bank of Japan holds rates steady, widens yield curve control band

The Bank of Japan held its benchmark interest rates steady and announced it will modify its yield curve control band, the central bank said in a statement.

The BOJ will expand the range of 10-year Japan government bond yield fluctuations from its current plus and minus 0.25 percentage points to plus and minus 0.5 percentage points, it said.

The adjustment is intended to “improve market functioning and encourage a smoother formation of the entire yield curve, while maintaining accommodative financial conditions,” the BOJ said.

The Japanese yen strengthened nearly 2% to stand at 134.33 against the U.S. dollar shortly after the announcement.

– Jihye Lee

Reserve Bank of Australia minutes show range of options were considered in December

Minutes from the Reserve Bank of Australia’s December meeting showed that the central bank had considered a number of options for its cash rate decision, including a complete pause in hikes.

“The Board considered several options for the cash rate decision at the December meeting: a 50 basis point increase; a 25 basis point increase; or no change in the cash rate,” the minutes said.

RBA board members also noted the importance of “acting consistently,” adding that the central bank will continue to consider a range of options for the upcoming year as well.

– Jihye Lee

China keeps key lending rates unchanged

The People’s Bank of China kept its one-year and five-year loan prime rates unchanged in December, according to an announcement.

The central bank maintained its one-year loan prime rate at 3.65% and its five-year loan prime rate at 4.30%, in line with expectations in a Reuters poll.

The offshore and onshore Chinese yuan were relatively flat at 6.9808 and 6.9783 against the U.S. dollar, respectively.

– Jihye Lee

CNBC Pro: Is China set for a rebound in 2023? Wall Street pros weigh in — and reveal how to trade it

What’s next for China after it rolled back a slew of Covid-19 measures?

Market pros weigh in on the prospect of a rebound in the world’s second-largest economy and reveal opportunities for investors.

CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Zavier Ong

Bank of Japan expected to hold rates steady

The Bank of Japan is expected to keep its interest rates steady at -0.10%, according to survey of economists by Reuters.

The rate decision is expected after the central bank’s two-day monetary policy concludes Tuesday.

Separately, Japan’s government and the BOJ are reportedly aiming revise a statement committing to a 2% inflation target at the earliest possible date, according to Kyodo News, citing government sources.

Jihye Lee

The Fed is overdoing rate hikes, Evercore ISI says

The Federal Reserve is likely overdoing it’s rate hikes to tame inflation and could end up tipping the U.S. economy into a recession, Ed Hyman of Evercore ISI wrote in a Sunday note.

The Federal Funds rate is now 6.5% versus a core PCE of 4.7% on the year and bond yields at 3.5%, Hyman wrote.

“And it’s not just the Fed tightening: ECB, BoE, Mexico, Switzerland, and Norway also tightened last week,” he said. “Perhaps more profoundly, the money supply is contracting.”

In addition, Evercore’s economic diffusion index is approaching recession territory along with other indicators such as company surveys, inflation data and layoff announcements. And, wage gains have started to slow and high rents are showing early signs of easing, signaling that inflation has likely run its course.

“In any event, 87 percent of American voters are concerned about a recession,” said Hyman.

—Carmen Reinicke

S&P 500 headed for worst December in four years

The S&P 500 has dropped more than 6% this month, as Wall Street struggles heading into year-end. That puts in on track for its worst monthly performance since September. It would also be its biggest December decline since 2018, when it slid 9.18%.

Stocks close lower for fourth day in a row

Recession fears and dashed hopes of a year-end rally weighed on stocks Monday, sending them to the fourth consecutive negative close.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average shed 163.85 points, or 0.50%, to close at 32,756.61. The S&P 500 fell 0.91% to 3,817.47, and the Nasdaq Composite shed 1.49%to 10,546.03 weighed down by shares of Amazon, which slipped 3%.

—Carmen Reinicke

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Fed rate decision, South Korea Trade, Australia Unemployment, New Zealand GDP

China’s November retail sales see significant miss

China’s industrial production for November grew 2.2%, after seeing a growth of 5% in October, according to official data. That’s lower than expectations for growth of 3.6% in a Reuters survey.

Retail sales fell 5.9% on an annualized basis, further than expectations of a decline of 3.7% in a Reuters survey and a fall of 0.5% the previous month.

— Jihye Lee

JPMorgan expects Asian markets to end week with cautious tone after Fed hike

JPMorgan expects markets in the Asia-Pacific region to end the week on a cautious tone following the Federal Reserve’s interest rate hike of 50 basis points.

“Given the U.S. market reaction after the FOMC meeting, we expect Asian markets to end the week with more cautious tone,” Tai Hui, the firm’s Asia-Pacific chief market strategist, said in a note.

Tai added that a weaker inflation print is needed before the Fed’s hawkishness fades, while the region may have more optimism on China’s expected reopening.

“The medium term prospects of China’s economic reopening and Asia’s domestic demand resilience could be a bright spot as the U.S. and Europe face more growth challenges,” Tai said. “We would need more weak inflation data in order for the Fed to tone down its hawkishness.”

— Jihye Lee

South Korea’s revised trade data shows slightly narrower trade deficit

South Korea’s revised trade data for November was flat, official data from the Bank of Korea showed.

Imports grew by 2.7% while exports fell by 14%, in line with readings from the previous month, resulting in a trade deficit of $6.99 billion, slightly narrower than the previous month’s reading of $7.01 billion.

Prices for imports grew 14.2% compared with a year ago after seeing growth of 19.8% the previous month. Export prices grew 8.6% in November compared with a year ago, after growing 13.7% in October.

— Jihye Lee

Japan’s trade data beat estimates, reports wider-than-expected trade deficit

Japan’s exports and imports for November grew more than expected on an annualized basis, official data showed.

Exports for the month rose 20%, beating expectations of 19.8% in a Reuters survey. Imports rose 30.3%, also higher than expectations of 27% in a Reuters poll.

This resulted in a wider-than-expected trade deficit of 2.02 trillion yen ($14.91 billion) after posting 2.16 trillion yen ($15.96 billion) in the previous month.

— Jihye Lee

CNBC Pro: Missed China’s reopening rally? Bank of America names global stocks to ride the second-leg

Investors will have a second opportunity to take part in the stock market rally after China announced a relaxation of Covid-19 restrictions, according to Bank of America.

The bank named more than 10 stocks after having found “green shoots of recovery in high-frequency data” that point toward rising earnings at companies exporting to China.

CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Ganesh Rao

Australia unemployment rate in line with expectations

Australia’s unemployment rate for November remained at 3.5% on an annualized basis, in line with expectations from a Reuters poll and flat from the prior month.

Official data from the Australia Bureau of Statistics showed the labor participation rate also remained at 66.7%, and the employment to population ratio remained at 64.4%.

Monthly hours worked increased to 1.89 billion.

— Jihye Lee

Fed announces 50 point rate hike

The Fed announced it will raise interest rates by 50 basis points, marking an end to the pattern of 75 point hikes seen in recent months.

Before this move, the Fed had raised rates by 75 basis points at the last four meetings. A basis point is equivalent to 0.01%.

The 50 basis point hike was widely expected ahead of the meeting.

It’s the final policy decision expected from the central bank in 2022.

Alex Harring

Powell wants ‘substantially more evidence’ that inflation is cooling

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said Wednesday the recent positive signs for inflation aren’t enough for the central bank to ease back on interest rate increases.

“It will take substantially more evidence to have confidence that inflation is on a sustained downward” path, Powell said during his post-meeting news conference.

The comments came as the Fed raised its benchmark rate another half percentage point and indicated at least another three-quarters of a point in hikes are coming. The decision also occurs a day after November’s consumer price index reading was up just 0.1%, an indication that inflation may have peaked.

However, Powell said inflation remains a problem.

“Price pressures remain evident across a broad range of goods and services,” Powell added.

—Jeff Cox

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Hong Kong stocks briefly notch 2%; China reports inflation data in line with expectations

Hong Kong movers: Property, tech stocks rise on reopening optimism

CNBC Pro: Wall Street says a recession is coming. One investment pro names her favorite stocks to tough it out

Wall Street pros are increasingly sounding the alarm on a looming recession.

As economic growth slows and inflation stays higher for longer, how should investors position? Veteran investor Nancy Tengler shares her favorite dividend stocks with CNBC.

Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Zavier Ong

There’s confusion, optimism over China’s shift away from zero-Covid: British Chamber of Commerce

Beijing’s “U-turn” on Covid policies is leading to both confusion and optimism, said Steven Lynch, managing director at the British Chamber of Commerce in China.

“There’s a lot of optimism and hope for 2023, but there is huge amounts of confusion,” he told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia,” describing the departure from strict Covid rules as happening “almost overnight.”

He said there may still be “enormous inconsistencies” between local policies and the central government’s rules, and people remain concerned about falling sick.

“One thing is very clear Covid is now here. Covid is pretty rife here in Beijing. And I think that brings a whole new set of challenges to what’s going to face China,” he said.

— Abigail Ng

Credit Suisse says inflation is still not a problem in China

China’s inflation is likely to stay below 3% in the next 12 to 18 months, and the central bank is comfortable with this range, according to Jack Siu, Greater China chief investment officer at Credit Suisse.

“We don’t think CPI is an issue in China, in fact, it’s going to be remaining steady within this range of 1% to 3% in the foreseeable future,” he told CNBC’s “Street Signs Asia.” Inflation soared in many economies, but consumer prices in China remained moderate due to weak demand.

But China is likely to see “a resurgence in consumer activity” in the coming six months as people get used to living with the virus after some back and forth in the reopening of the economy, Siu said.

“In the second quarter, we expect the GDP to rally to 6.1% — partly it’s base effects, partly because people are living more normally,” he said.

— Abigail Ng

China’s producer prices fell in November, while consumer prices rose

China’s producer price index fell 1.3% in November compared to a year ago, extending its decline after shedding 1.3% in October, and slightly beating estimates for a 1.4% contraction in a Reuters poll.

The nation’s consumer price index rose 1.6% in November on an annualized basis, in line with expectations and easing from October’s reading of 2.1%.

The onshore and offshore Chinese yuan strengthened, and were around 6.94 per dollar shortly after the economic data releases.

— Lee Ying Shan

CNBC Pro: These 4 global consumer tech stocks are set to win on China reopening, HSBC says

Some global consumer tech companies could gain as China relaxes some Covid-19 restrictions, and shares of four firms could rise by more than 40%, according to HSBC.

The Asia-focused bank said a faster-than-expected recovery of consumer electronics in the coming months would benefit these companies.

CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Ganesh Rao

South Korea posts smaller current account surplus for October

South Korea registered a current account surplus of $880 million in October, a decline from September’s $1.6 billion.

Direct investment assets in South Korea increased by $2.75 billion, compared to $4.74 billion a month ago. Direct investment liabilities increased from $430 million to $810 million.

South Korea has been posting a current account surplus for the year, except for the months of July and August. A current account surplus indicates that a country sells more to the world than it buys from outside its borders.

— Lee Ying Shan

Stocks finish higher, S&P 500 breaks 5-day losing streak

Stocks closed higher, with the S&P 500 snapping its longest losing streak since October.

The S&P added 0.75% to finish at 3,963.51. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 183.56 points, or 0.55%, to settle at 33,781.48, while the Nasdaq Composite rallied 1.13% to end at 11,082.00.

— Samantha Subin

Interest on 30-year fixed rate mortgages falls

The cost of financing a home has ticked lower for a fourth consecutive week, according to Freddie Mac.

The weekly average rate on a 30-year mortgage is now 6.33%, down from 6.49% last week. Over the past month, the interest rate on these loans has come down about 75 basis points: On Nov. 10, the average rate on a fixed 30-year mortgage was 7.08%.

Even with the decline in the short term, the cost of financing a home loan is up significantly from a year ago. Last year at this time, the rate on a 30-year mortgage averaged 3.1%.

Despite the decline in rates, demand for home loans continues to decline. Mortgage application volume slid 1.9% last week, compared to the week before that, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

Darla Mercado, Diana Olick

Part of the yield curve is now most inverted since 2001

The inversion of the 3-month and 10-year Treasury yield curve is now the deepest since January 2001 at nearly 90 basis points, according to CNBC data. The short end of the curve soared to 4.30% from just 0.05% at the beginning of the year as traders priced in higher interest rates.

The yield curve inverts when shorter-term Treasury rates rise above longer-term yields. Many economists view the 2-year 10-year part of the yield curve as more predictive of a potential recession.

Cathie Wood pointed to that part of the yield curve, which is the most inverted since the early 1980s. The popular investor said the bond market is signaling that the Federal Reserve is making a “serious mistake” with its jumbo rate hikes.

— Yun Li

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Hong Kong stocks rise 2% after local media report that city is considering dropping outdoor mask rule

Hong Kong mulls dropping outdoor mask rules: Report

Fitch expects home prices in Australia and China to decline in 2023

Fitch Ratings expects home prices in Australia to see a significant drop of between 7% to 10% next year, it said in its latest outlook report.

The agency also predicts that China’s home prices will fall by 1% to 3% next year.

“We expect prices to decline further in 2023 before bottoming out but mortgage performance to only modestly deteriorate, in the face of economic headwinds,” Tracy Wan of Fitch Ratings said in the report.

However, home prices in Japan could buck the trend to rise by 2% to 4% in 2023, the report said. Australia’s prices are forecast to rise in 2024.

– Jihye Lee

Japan’s economy contracted less than expected in third quarter

Japan’s economy saw an annualized quarterly contraction of 0.8% in the third quarter, with the revised gross domestic product reading beating expectations in a Reuters survey for a 1.1% contraction.

The government’s first preliminary estimate released in November was a 1.2% decline.

The nation also reported a 64.1 billion yen ($469.3 million) deficit in its unadjusted current account balance, government data showed. The reading significantly missed estimates for a surplus of 623.4 billion yen in a separate Reuters poll.

– Jihye Lee

Australia’s trade surplus larger than expected in October

Australia’s trade surplus for October came in at 12.2 billion Australian dollars ($8.19 billion), slightly larger than expected, official data showed.

Economists polled by Reuters predicted a print of 12.1 billion Australian dollars, expecting a further drop than reported – after the economy saw a trade surplus of 12.4 billion Australian dollars.

Exports fell 0.9%, and imports declined 0.7%.

— Abigail Ng

Stocks close mostly lower

Stocks closed mostly lower Wednesday, with the S&P 500 slipping 0.19% to close at 3,933.92.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed flat, or 1.58 points higher, to finish the session at 33,597.92. The Nasdaq Composite fell 0.51% to end at 10,958.55.

— Samantha Subin

CNBC Pro: Bank of America says these two global chip stocks could rise by 75% on EV car sales

A shortage of semiconductors during a boom in electric-vehicle sales could help raise profits at a handful of chip makers, according to Bank of America.

The Wall Street bank predicted that two chip stocks could see their share prices rise by more than 75% on the back of that trend.

CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Ganesh Rao

Pending economic data could launch a rally into next year, says Morgan Stanley’s Slimmon

Don’t be surprised if economic data coming out over the next week kicks off a rally into the end of the year and potentially 2023, according to Andrew Slimmon, Morgan Stanley Investment Management’s senior portfolio manager.

The key period of data releases begins Friday with the producer price index, followed by November’s consumer price index and another likely rate hike from the Federal Reserve next week.

“The last time those were released they all led to rallies in the stock market because we had better inflation prints,” he said.

Like many investors, Slimmon expects a downturn ahead, given the inverted yield curve, but does not anticipate the “big earnings collapse,” or downturn, many people are predicting in the first quarter.

This is in part due to the fact that many consumers have beefed up savings in recent years given the proximity of the most recent recession.

“The message of this year is that the economy has proven far more resilient than many people expect and I don’t think next quarter is going to be the end of that,” he said.

— Samantha Subin

CNBC Pro: Is Apple a stock to buy or avoid? Two investors face off

It’s been a tumultuous year for tech companies, as investors flee growth stocks in the face of rising interest rates, and other headwinds.

Apple has held up better amid the tech carnage, although there have been some headwinds.

Two investors faced off on CNBC’s “Street Signs Asia” on Wednesday to make a case for and against buying the stock.

CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Weizhen Tan

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Asia markets trade mixed amid recession fears; China to report trade data

TSMC shares rise after Apple says it will use chips made in the U.S. by the Taiwan firm

China expected to see a further drop in exports and imports

China’s trade data for November is expected to show a further drop in both exports and imports, according to a Reuters poll of economists.

Average forecasts predict exports will drop 3.5% in November on an annualized basis after declining 0.3% in October, and imports are forecasted to fall 6% after slipping 0.7% the previous month.

The trade balance in U.S. dollars is predicted to narrow to $78.1 billion — smaller than the previous month’s $85.15 billion.

— Jihye Lee

CNBC Pro: ‘A gift to investors’: BlackRock says it’s time to rethink bonds

It’s time to rethink bonds, according to the BlackRock Investment Institute, which said “the lure of fixed income is strong” right now.

“Higher yields are a gift to investors who have long been starved for income. And investors don’t have to go far up the risk spectrum to receive it,” Philipp Hildebrand, vice chairman of BlackRock, and Jean Boivin, head of the BlackRock Investment Institute, wrote in a note last week.

They outlined their top ways to cash in.

Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Zavier Ong

Australia’s economy saw slower growth in the third quarter

Australia’s economy grew by 0.6% from the previous quarter, official data showed – missing estimates expecting a 0.7% quarterly growth predicted in a Reuters poll.

The latest gross domestic product showed subdued growth from the second quarter’s expansion of 0.9% from the first three months of the year.

On an annualized basis, GDP in the third quarter added 5.9%, which the Australian Bureau of Statistics said reflects “sustained economic growth since the effects of the Delta outbreak in September quarter 2021.”

“Growth was largely driven by strength in household spending,” it added.

The annualized figure also missed expectations in a separate Reuters poll for a 6.2% gain.

Australia’s dollar was little changed after the report and the S&P/ASX 200 maintained 0.7% lower.

— Abigail Ng

CNBC Pro: UBS says shares in this global airline are set to soar by 55%

Shares of a global airline are set to soar by 55% over the next year, according to UBS.

The investment bank raised its price target after the pan-European airline said it expects to see bumper demand during Christmas.

CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Ganesh Rao

Stocks finish lower, build on Monday’s losses

Stocks tumbled Tuesday, building on losses from the previous session.

The S&P 500 shed 1.44% to close at 3,941.26, while the Nasdaq Composite sank 2% to finish at 11,014.89. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 350.76 points, or 1.03%, to settle at 33,596.34.

— Samantha Subin

Oil falls to lowest level since Dec. 27, 2021

Oil prices slumped Tuesday, weighed down by economic uncertainty even amid a Russian oil price cap and potential demand uptick thanks to China’s reopening.

U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude for January delivery fell more than 4% to $73.85 in the afternoon Tuesday. Brent crude for February delivery slipped 4.34% to $79.09 per barrel.

The U.S. also said it sees oil production increasing next year, reversing its future outlook after five months of cuts. A monthly report from the Energy Information Administration said production is forecast to hit 12.34 million barrels a day in 2023, more than the daily record of 12.315 million barrels a day in 2019.

—Carmen Reinicke

Inflation is eroding consumer wealth and may bring 2023 recession, Dimon says

Dimon said in June that he was preparing the bank for an economic “hurricane” caused by the Federal Reserve and Russia’s war in Ukraine.

Al Drago | Bloomberg | Getty Images

American consumers are still doing well and supporting the U.S. economy, but that may change next year, according to JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon.

Consumers have $1.5 trillion in excess savings from pandemic stimulus programs and are spending 10% more than in 2021, he said Tuesday on CNBC’s “Squawk Box.”

“Inflation is eroding everything I just said, and that trillion and a half dollars will run out sometime mid-year next year,” Dimon said. “When you’re looking out forward, those things may very well derail the economy and cause a mild or hard recession that people worry about.”

Dimon also opined on cryptocurrencies, the necessity of fossil fuels and other topics during the wide-ranging interview.

— Hugh Son

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Wall Street, Reserve Bank of Australia, interest rates

Beijing announces further Covid easing measures

Beijing city announced negative Covid tests will no longer be required to enter most public areas, malls or residential areas, while bars and so-called KTV lounges, or karaoke bars.

Separately, Reuters reported on Monday that China could announce a further relaxation of Covid curbs as early as Wednesday, citing two sources with knowledge of the matter.

The report said there would be 10 new measures in addition to the 20 that were put out in November.

Several cities in China relaxed Covid testing rules in recent days.

— Evelyn Cheng, Abigail Ng

Foxconn reports slump in revenue after Covid-related unrest at China plant

Apple supplier Foxconn, also known as Hon Hai Precision Industry, reported its monthly revenue for November fell over 11% compared to the same period last year.

Revenue for the month totaled 551.1 billion new Taiwan dollars ($18 billion), and was down more than 29% versus October.

The Taiwanese firm said the fall was due to “production gradually entering off-peak seasonality and a portion of shipments being impacted by the epidemic in Zhengzhou,” where the company runs the world’s largest iPhone assembly plant.

Shares of the company dropped 1.48% in Asia’s morning.

– Arjun Kharpal

Chinese markets to pause trade for 3 minutes on Tuesday as nation mourns for former leader

Australia expected to raise rates by 25 basis points: Reuters poll

Australia’s central bank is expected to raise its cash rate by 25 basis points to 3.1% on Tuesday, according to economists polled by Reuters.

That would be the Reserve Bank of Australia’s eighth hike this year, and the third consecutive hike of 25 basis points since October.

In a statement following its November meeting, the RBA said “the full effect” of the series of cash rate hikes lie ahead.

Meanwhile, Matt Simpson, senior market analyst at City Index, said there’s potential for a pause in rate hikes further ahead.

“The case for a pause is certainly building,” he said. “Some measures of inflation expectations are moving lower, and the monthly inflation print suggests inflation has peaked.”

Inflation in Australia remains well above the RBA’s target of between 2% and 3%, though it saw slight easing in October, according to the central bank’s monthly consumer price indicator.

— Charmaine Jacob

Stocks finish lower to start the week

Stocks finished lower Monday as fears mounted that the Federal Reserve will continue hiking rates.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average slid 482.78 points, or 1.4%, to finish at 33,947.10. The S&P 500 shed 1.79% to settle at 3,998.84, while the Nasdaq Composite tumbled 1.93% to close at 11,239.94.

— Samantha Subin

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China Covid relaxation, Hong Kong stocks rise

Morgan Stanley upgrades China stocks to overweight

Strategists at Morgan Stanley have raised its recommendation for Chinese stocks to overweight, according to a Sunday note.

The upgrade marks the end of the firm’s equal-weight stance on Chinese equities that it has held for close to two years, strategists led by Laura Wang said.

Morgan Stanley noted multiple factors seeing “meaningful positive development” since November, including what the firm views as “a confirmed path towards final post-Covid reopening.”

— Michael Bloom, Jihye Lee

Hong Kong movers: Chinese tech firms and reopening stocks jump

Chinese technology, consumer and travel-related firms listed in Hong Kong saw sharp gains in early trade after some cities in China saw some easing in Covid restrictions.

Tech heavyweights Tencent gained 5.5% and Meituan rose 3.5%, while Alibaba jumped 4.72% and Xiaomi added 7.31%. EV stocks such as Li Auto jumped 9.19% and Nio climbed 11.5%.

Meanwhile, Hong Kong-listed casino stocks also jumped, with MGM China rising 12.44%, Wynn Macau climbing 12.35% and Sands China adding 7.5%. Galaxy Entertainment rose 3.61% and SJM Holdings rose 4.82%.

Hotpot restaurant operator Haidilao soared 15%, and shares of airlines also popped. China Southern Airlines and China Eastern Airlines each rose more than 5%, while Air China gained 4%.

The broader Hang Seng index was up 3.21%.

— Abigail Ng, Jihye Lee

China’s services activity index at lowest in six months, private survey shows

The Caixin/S&P Global services Purchasing Managers’ Index for November came in at 46.7, representing the lowest reading in six months.

The print also marks the third consecutive month of contraction in output and new work, after October’s reading came in at 48.4, while September’s print was 49.3.

PMI readings are sequential and represent month-on-month changes in factory activity. The 50-point mark separates growth from contraction.

“The rate of decline was solid overall, but remained weaker than the falls seen during the previous major wave of Covid-19 cases from March to May,” Caixin said in a release.

“Efforts to curb the spread of Covid-19 amid a notable rise in case numbers in recent weeks, weighed on service sector business operations and customer demand across China during November,” it added.

China’s official non-manufacturing PMI released last week stood at 46.7, the lowest since April 2022.

— Abigail Ng

Chinese yuan strengthens on reopening hopes

The Chinese currency strengthened to around 7 against the U.S. dollar following the latest reports that signaled further loosening of China’s Covid policies.

The offshore yuan traded at 6.9861 against the greenback, strengthening past 7-levels for the first time since mid-September.

Beijing and Shenzhen are taking steps to loosen testing requirements and quarantine rules despite the daily case count hovering near all-time highs.

The latest moves come about a week after public unrest erupted over the strict measures in various parts of the country.

— Jihye Lee

Oil futures up 2% after OPEC+ holds steady and China reportedly eases some Covid restrictions

Chinese markets to pause trade for 3 minutes on Tuesday as nation mourns for former leader

CNBC Pro: Fund manager names two global retailers that are about to ‘dominate’

A veteran Schroders fund manager has named two global retailers that are about to ‘dominate’ their sector.

Andrew Brough, who runs the Schroder UK Mid Cap Fund, said the two conservatively run companies are taking market share ahead of a recession by silently acquiring failing competitors cheaply.

One of those stocks has already risen by 30% this year while its benchmark index has declined by 29%.

CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Ganesh Rao

Stock futures tumble, bond yields rise on back of hotter-than-anticipated jobs data

Stock futures dropped while bond yields rose in response to the 8:30 a.m. jobs data that came in stronger than expected by economists.

Here’s how each major futures index and the notable bond yields moved over the course of the 30 minutes leading up to and following the release of the data:

CNBC Pro: Goldman Sachs upgrades this global tech giant, saying the stock could rise up to 90%

Goldman Sachs sees one opportunity in electric vehicles that’s on an “upward trend.”

This trend will gain pace as EVs become “ever more technology driven” and simpler to build, said Goldman analysts in a Dec. 1 report.

That’s set to benefit one global stock, said Goldman, which gives the stock up to 90% upside in its bull case for the firm.

CNBC’s Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Weizhen Tan

U.S. payrolls jumped by 263,000 in November

Job growth was stronger than expected in November despite the Federal Reserve’s efforts to cool the labor market.

Nonfarm payrolls grew by 263,000 last month while the unemployment rate was unchanged at 3.7%, according to the Labor Department on Friday.

Payroll numbers were expected to jump by 200,000 more jobs, according to consensus estimates from the Dow Jones. The unemployment rate was expected to remain at 3.7%.

Stock futures dropped following the payrolls release.

— Sarah Min

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