Global Market Report - June 6, 2018

US tech firms once again set the agenda for global stock markets on Wednesday

James Gard 6 June, 2018 | 10:54AM
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Asia

Hong Kong’s tech-focused Hang Seng Index was one of the biggest risers on Wednesday morning after the Nasdaq closed at a new record high. Sentiment towards tech has been tested this year, not least because of the Facebook (FB) data scandal, but global investors seem to have renewed their appetite for the sector – Microsoft (MSFT) buying GitHub in a multi-billion dollar deal has helped stimulate interest too.

The Hang Seng rose 165 points on Wednesday to 31,259 but is still a way of January’s levels above 33,000.

India’s BSE Sensex is also higher today and is creeping back towards the all-time high level above 36,000 points also seen earlier in the year.

With the dollar pushing back through 110 yen for the first time in a few weeks, Japanese equities got their usual currency boost. But again, daily gains were modest.

Australia’s All Ordinaries pushed higher after GDP for the first quarter was better than expected.

Europe

The eurozone exchanges followed the global trend today and there is plenty of newsflow to keep traders occupied. Next week the European Central Bank is finally going to make a concrete announcement about its long-running quantitative easing (QE) programme. This news gave the euro a push and weakened bond yields, which were already softening amid political progress in Spain and Italy.

The FTSE 100 was modestly higher in midmorning trading, while the FTSE 250 was near a recent record high. The mid-cap index was pushed higher today by a 5% gain in WHSmith (SMWH) shares. The retailer, recently voted Britain’s least favourite, reported a rise in sales in its travel division despite weak growth on the high street.

North America

Positive moves higher in the share prices of Amazon (AMZN), Netflix (NFLX) and Apple (AAPL) helped Nasdaq to hit a new record high on Tuesday, despite weakness on the Dow – whose constituents are sensitive to trade war fears – and a tiny daily gain on the S&P 500.

And Twitter (TWTR), whose growth is much fretted over by analysts, has had a good week upon reports that it is set to join the S&P 500. The company’s shares were up 5% yesterday.

Weekly jobless claims and oil inventories will be in view on Thursday.

 

 

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Securities Mentioned in Article

Security NamePriceChange (%)Morningstar
Rating
Amazon.com Inc179.62 USD3.43Rating
Apple Inc170.82 USD0.54Rating
Meta Platforms Inc Class A439.48 USD-0.43Rating
Microsoft Corp409.50 USD2.62Rating
Netflix Inc556.13 USD-1.54Rating
WH Smith PLC1,140.00 GBX-3.55

About Author

James Gard

James Gard  is senior editor for Morningstar.co.uk

 

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