LONDON: World tech stocks hit a record high on Tuesday spurred on by an all-time peak for Apple, a 17-year top for European tech firms, and news that Twitter was set to join Wall Street’s flagship S&P 500 index and Netflix to join the S&P 100.
MSCI’s global tech index scored the milestone as the FAANGs — Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix and Google — looked set to drive the technology-heavy Nasdaq to fresh highs when New York reopens shortly.
The upbeat mood had raised Asia’s big BATTS — Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent, Taiwan Semiconductor, Samsung — with Alibaba notching a new high and Baidu surging 5 percent in its best day in more than a month.
Europe got in on the act too as tech stocks there jumped more than 2 percent in a third day of gains that took them to their highest since the dot-com boom of 2001.
“The market is being pushed up by just a few huge companies,” said Jerome Schupp, equity analyst at Prime Partners in Lausanne.
“All big names from Apple to Amazon and Microsoft are able to make huge buybacks and acquisitions, and the internal growth of most of these companies is pretty in line with expectations.”
Moves in other markets were modest or centered around growing nervousness about global trade tensions.
The dollar, the euro and yen largely cancelled each other out, but the dollar made 1.7 percent on Mexico’s peso and 0.4 percent on Canada’s dollar as hopes for a new NAFTA deal looked to be falling apart.
Instead, U.S. President Donald Trump is considering separate talks with the United States’ two neighbours, White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow said on Tuesday.
“His preference now, and he asked me to convey this, is to actually negotiate with Mexico and Canada separately,” Kudlow said. “He may be moving quickly towards these bilateral discussions instead of as a whole.”
Mexico also said it will impose tariffs of 15 percent to 25 percent on U.S. steel products and on some agricultural goods from pork to potatoes, in retaliation against U.S. President Donald Trump’s own metals tariffs.
There was some selling of Italian government bonds again too after their rebound of the last few days and as traders digested the first comments from new Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte.
“The truth is that we have created a radical change and we’re proud of it,” Conte told the Senate, where he is expected to win a confidence vote later in the day.
The coalition, made up of the 5-Star Movement and the League, has about a 10-vote majority in the Senate and a wider margin in the lower house, which is due to hold its own confidence vote on Wednesday.
Market participants will also be keeping an eye on a speech by ECB President Mario Draghi later for any indication of how the political developments in southern Europe may affect monetary policy.
Other euro zone government bond yields were 1-2 basis points lower, as a measure of calm returned to the market.
Germany’s 10-year government bond, the benchmark for the bloc, saw its yield drop 1.5 bps to 0.40 percent, while the 10-year U.S. Treasury note yield edged back to 2.91 percent after brushing 2.95 percent overnight.
Spain also saw a change of government last week, with socialist Pedro Sanchez replacing conservative Mariano Rajoy. Investors assessed the likelihood of another election there as low, which kept a lid on volatility.
PEDAL TO THE METALS
For U.S. markets there was a flurry of manufacturing and services PMI data due between 1445 and 1500 GMT as well as more hints from Donald Trump that he will meet North Korea’s leader Kim Jong Un in just over a week’s time.
Asia’s moves overnight saw Japan’s Nikkei gain 0.2 percent, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng climb 0.15 percent and the Shanghai Composite Index rise 0.25 percent after data showed China’s services sector expanding at a steady pace.
The Australian dollar declined 0.15 percent to $0.7636 after climbing to a six-week high of $0.7666 overnight on upbeat domestic data.
In commodities, oil prices went sideways after falling nearly 2 percent in the previous session on growing U.S. production and expectations of higher OPEC supplies.
Brent crude futures dipped 15 cents to $75.13 while U.S. crude futures were up 19 cents at $64.95 a barrel after finishing the previous session down 1.6 percent.
Industrial metals like copper, and zinc and aluminium were all 0.6-1.4 percent higher though safe-haven spot gold was little changed at $1,291.54 an ounce after posting three days of losses.
Copper’s rise lifted it to its highest in six weeks and came as wage talks at the world’s biggest mine – BHP’s, Escondida mine in Chile – rumbled on.
Last year, a failure to reach a labour deal at the mine led to a 44-day strike that jolted the global copper market.
“Union leaders at the Escondida copper operation sent their most ambitious wage proposal to owners BHP Billiton, raising the possibility of strike action later this year,” analysts at ANZ bank said in a note.
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Source: Brecorder