Wall Street closed mixed on Tuesday as investors questioned whether the recent rally can be maintained given the latest economic data readings painting a mixed picture about the rate cut outlook in the US with the odds for a cut in September currently sitting at 67%. The Dow Jones rose 0.08% for a fifth consecutive winning day, the S&P500 added 0.13%, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq ended the session down 0.1%. Treasury yields declining on Tuesday was also key driver of the Dow and S&P500 rising as investor optimism for rate cuts boosted appetite for equities. Disney shares plunged 9.5% after the media and entertainment giant missed on revenue expectations, while Peleton shares rose 15.5% on speculation that private equity firms have been considering buying out the company.
In Europe overnight, markets closed in the green as investors responded to the release of corporate earnings results in the region. The STOXX600 rose 1.15% boosted by financial services stocks, Germany’s DAX added 1.4%, the French CAC rose just under 1% and, in the UK, the FTSE100 ended the day up 1.22%. Swiss banking giant UBS rallied 9.5% on Tuesday after beating expectations by returning to a quarterly net profit in the latest results while Italian bank UniCredit rose 3.6% on reporting a net profit of $2.6bn euros for the first quarter which beat consensus estimates.
The Asia markets closed mostly in positive territory on Tuesday led by South Korea’s Kospi index gaining 2.16% as heavyweights like Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix did most of the heavy lifting. Japan’s Nikkei rose 1.57% and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng ended the day down 0.51%
Locally, the ASX extended the recent rally into Tuesday’s session with the key index closing the day up 1.44% with all 11 sectors ending the session in the green led by the utilities sector jumping 2.82%. Investor sentiment was boosted on Tuesday by the RBA maintaining Australia’s cash rate at the current level of 4.35% for the next period which was widely expected.
The market didn’t appear to respond to the RBA’s upward revision for inflation expectations over the remainder of 2024 though. Services and fuel inflation remain elevated and are the key drivers of inflation remaining sticky, however, Australia’s central bank drastically revised the inflation outlook upwards from the previous expectation of inflation hitting 3.2% by the December quarter of 2024 to now expecting inflation to remain at 3.8% in the December quarter. This is expected to be driven by wage price index remaining elevated, subdued economic growth, higher imports, higher employment, higher household income, and lower labour productivity.
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