Finance

Morning Bid: “Super bad feeling”

A look at the day ahead in markets from Julien Ponthus.

With the Nasdaq (.NDX) losing about a quarter of its value since the beginning of the year, no doubt some investors will share Elon Musk’s “super bad feeling” about the economy.

But the Tesla CEO’s sentiment, shared with his executives in an email, might be taken by others with a generous pinch of salt, given Friday’s data showing the American economy generated more jobs jobs in May than expected. read more

Asked by Reuters about Musk’s comments, Joe Biden suggested the issue lay with Tesla, and pointed to investments made by Ford to compete with the electric car maker. read more

But with the jury still out on whether the world’s biggest economy is heading towards a hard or a soft landing, this Friday’s U.S. consumer price report could shape expectations for the pace of the Federal Reserve’s policy tightening.

What is already clear this morning, however, is that the Bank of Japan remains a firmly on the doves’ side, with Governor Haruhiko Kuroda stressing his top priority was to support the economy through “powerful” monetary stimulus. read more

The European Central Bank’s meeting on Thursday will be a key one where the bank may draw a line under its years of bond-buying stimulus and signal a first rate hike in July, after May’s record 8.1% euro zone inflation print read more .

And while there are signs the European economy’s post-COVID-19 rebound may be sputtering, France’s finance minister said on Sunday, that despite the war in Ukraine and high inflation, he expected positive growth for 2022.

Bruno Le Maire’s optimism seems to match the mood across markets on Monday. Asia closed with gains, while European and U.S. futures point towards a positive open.

Musk’s “super bad feeling” might be shared instead by British prime minister Boris Johnson — he may be in for a tough week, as Conservative lawmakers prepare to challenge his leadership read more .

Key developments that should provide more direction to markets on Monday:

-China May services activity contracts for third straight month

-British finance minister Rishi Sunak faces a parliamentary committee hearing on the cost of living

-Italy’s TIM aims to maximise value and cut debt in break-up read more

-U.S. to let Eni, Repsol ship Venezuela oil to Europe for debt read more

-Czech central bank chief: another rate hike is likely, by 75 bps or more read more

nonfarm payrolls

Reporting by Julien Ponthus

This article was originally published by Reuters.

Global Business Magazine

Recent Posts

Dubai’s manic year keeps running — AED 23.8bn in one last-November week

Dubai’s property market has moved beyond the “hot market” phase into a new era of…

1 day ago

DUBAI REAL ESTATE’S RECORD RUN CONTINUES AS 2025 PROPERTY SALES CLIMB TO AED624.1 BILLION

Busy November drives deals to new high of 19,016 so far Dubai, UAE, 3rd December,…

5 days ago

How Invictus’s MCB deal could reshape African food supply chains

Dubai-based Invictus Investment has quietly done something strategically loud. The agrifood and FMCG trader announced…

1 week ago

The Oasis: How the UAE Became West Asia’s Fulcrum of Transformation

Abu Dhabi — For decades, commentators have blamed a perceived “knowledge deficit” for parts of…

1 week ago

Dubai’s Ambitious Drive: A 22 Million sq ft Auto Market to Reboot Global Car Trade

Dubai has announced a massive 22-million-sq-ft Auto Market with 1,500 showrooms, a DP World–led project…

2 weeks ago

DUBAI’S ULTRA-LUXURY SECTOR EVOLVES TO CREATENEW ‘GOLDEN TRIANGLE’ OF WEALTH’

Dubai’s ultra-luxury villa market is evolving into a stable global asset class, with record AED40M+…

2 weeks ago