NEW YORK: US stocks have advanced, putting major indexes on track to snap a recent spate of declines, buoyed by gains in industrial and energy shares as US Treasury yields eased.
The Dow and S&P dropped for a second consecutive session and the Nasdaq fell for a third straight on Wednesday after minutes from the US Federal Reserve’s January meeting showed the central bank’s rate-setting committee grew more confident in the need to keep raising rates.
Concerns about a faster pace of rate hikes from the central bank were eased by comments on Thursday from St Louis Fed President James Bullard that expressed concerns a “bunch of hikes” could turn Fed policy restrictive, and benchmark 10-year US Treasury yields retreated from the more than four-year highs hit on Wednesday.
LONDON: European shares fell slightly on Thursday as a flurry of corporate results failed to lift sentiment after a new wave of speculation about faster hikes in US interest rates soured risk appetite globally.
An hour after the open, the publication of the German business confidence index, which fell more than expected in February, and a downward revision in UK economic growth cemented the gloom, although a rebound on Wall Street from losses in the previous day helped shares come off lows.
The pan-European STOXX 600 index ended down 0.2 per cent, having fallen as much as 1 per cent earlier in the session. The index remains down 5.7 per cent from the two-and-a-half year peak hit at the end of January.
Germany’s DAX was fairly flat, down 0.07 per cent, at 12,461.91.
Barclays was the best performing stock among blue-chips, rising 4.4 per cent after it pledged to restore its full dividend with a payout of 6.5 pence per share in 2018.
The earnings further buoyed optimism on British banks, a day after Lloyds reported its highest pre-tax profit since 2006.
But, disappointing results, big stocks going ex-dividend and concerns over rising bond yields hit Britain’s top share index on Thursday, pulling it to a one-week low.
The blue chip FTSE 100 index fell 0.40 per cent to 7,252.39 points, while mid caps fell 0.3 per cent.
Shares in British American Tobacco fell 2.1 per cent after the cigarette maker reported weaker-than-expected sales growth for 2017.
TOKYO: Asia stocks were mixed, with Japan and Hong Kong’s key indexes falling, but China’s markets lifting on their first day of trading after the Lunar New Year holiday.
MSCI’s Asia ex-Japan stock index was weaker by 0.98 per cent, while Japan’s Nikkei index closed down 1.07 per cent at 21,736.44.
Hong Kong stocks pulled back from a two-week high hit in the previous session as investors took profit from sectors such as tech and financials, although the decline was capped by inflows from mainland China.
The Hang Seng index closed down 466.21 points, or 1.48 per cent, at 30,965.68. The Hang Seng China Enterprises index fell 1.25 per cent to 12,528.64.
China’s main Shanghai Composite index closed up 2.17 per cent at 3,268.56 points, while its blue-chip CSI300 index ended up 2.17 per cent at 4,52.73.