China’s Morning Bid Disappoints, Oil Declines, but Banks Shine

China’s Morning Bid Disappoints, Oil Declines, but Banks Shine

A look at ‌the day ahead in⁤ U.S. and⁢ global‌ markets from Mike DolanChina’s spluttering recovery set⁣ the tone ⁢for⁢ world markets on⁤ Monday⁢ after a ⁤bumper week of U.S. ⁢disinflation news⁤ was capped with⁤ impressive ⁢bank results ‍and ⁣rising consumer confidence.In what ​was read as another underwhelming collection of ⁤macro updates,‌ China said its annual economic ⁤growth ‌rate ‌picked ⁣up to 6.3%​ in⁤ second quarter, well‍ below the⁢ 7.3% forecasts ‌as ​base-effects​ offset a firmer 0.8% expansion ‌during the quarter.Sub-forecast and ⁣sharply slowing retail ​sales⁣ growth​ for June ⁤likewise offset ‍a more ⁢upbeat industrial output ​readout for the months.Even⁤ though the‍ closure of‍ Hong Kong and Tokyo ⁤markets on ⁤Monday dampened trading volumes⁣ in Asia,⁣ Shanghai stocks (.SSEC) slipped almost 1% and the⁣ yuan‌ fell ‍back too.Crude oil prices ‌also retreated sharply below⁣ $80⁢ per‍ barrel, ⁢underlining year-on-year declines of⁤ more than 20% through‍ mid-July that​ help ⁤sustain⁤ headline disinflation pressures into the second ⁣half ‍of the year.And it’s that disinflation story, and hopes the ‍Federal Reserve ⁢will deliver a⁢ final hike of its 16-month‌ rate​ rise campaign next ​week, that drove Wall St stocks to their best levels in more than ⁢a year ⁣last week, ‍with the ⁣tech-heavy Nasdaq (.IXIC)​ clocking ⁤up its​ biggest​ weekly gain since March.Two-year ​U.S.⁢ inflation expectations ‌embedded in the ⁤Treasury market‍ fell as low⁢ as​ 1.88% on Friday‍ and ‌held at 1.90% on​ Monday, ​well below‌ the Fed’s ⁣2%‌ target.Surveys showing⁢ surging U.S. household confidence in June, as ⁣real ​wage⁣ growth turns positive and ‌jobs​ remain ​plentiful,⁢ saw a ⁢hesitation in interest rate​ markets on⁢ Friday as Fed officials enter a‍ blackout ‌period‌ before the July 26 decision.Even ⁢though falling​ import and export ⁣prices​ in June⁢ reinforced the disinflation picture, two-year ⁢Treasury‍ yields recouped some ‌of the week’s steep ‌declines. ​That, in turn, ‌stalled ‌stock indices slightly in‌ red at ⁢the close on Friday.Big banks made an ‌impressive start to‌ the Q2 earnings season⁢ with‌ profit beats ‌for the likes​ of⁤ JPMorgan, Citi and Wells Fargo ⁣- but red flags⁣ raised about ⁣credit and ⁤real estate and ⁣the ‌impact of tighter regulation‍ saw their shares ⁢slip on the day.Other major ⁣banks such as ⁣Bank of America⁣ and​ Morgan ‌Stanley report on Tuesday, with⁤ Tesla and Netflix on⁤ Wednesday the first of the ‌mega cap tech ‌giants to ‍weigh in.LUXURY FIRMSU.S. ​stock futures were⁢ little changed ‌ahead of Monday’s open, ⁤but two-year​ Treasury yields edged back lower ⁢to 4.72%.The ​dollar‍ (.DXY) ‌edged lower⁣ again, with the euro ⁣briefly ‌hitting its ​highest since February‍ last year.”Peak​ Fed” speculation ‍has‍ pummeled the ⁢dollar again this ‌month, with ⁣hopes that mirrored gains in the⁣ euro and sterling ⁢will⁢ help ⁤blunt hotter inflation ‍pictures there. British June​ inflation ​readings on⁢ Wednesday will⁣ be critical⁤ for UK markets.The euro trade-weighted ​index‍ hit its ⁢highest level on record on Friday, ‍surpassing a ‍prior peak from late 2008. Sterling’s equivalent last⁣ week⁣ hit its…

Original‍ from www.reuters.com

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