Sterling Rebounds, Turns Its Sights To UK Services PMI

 | Jul 04, 2018 04:02AM ET

Here are the latest developments in global markets:

  • FOREX: The US dollar index is down by a little over 0.2% on Wednesday, extending some of the losses it posted yesterday on the back of declining longer-term US Treasury yields. The yen enjoyed some haven demand amid trade tensions, while the pound was buoyed by some hawkish rhetoric from the BoE and an encouraging UK construction PMI.
  • STOCKS: Wall Street gave up early gains on Tuesday, to close lower overall. The drop was led by the tech sector and was triggered by reports China had banned US chipmaker Micron Technology Inc (NASDAQ:MU) (-5.5%) from selling in the country. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite fell by 0.86%, while the Dow Jones and S&P 500 followed suit, closing down by 0.54% and 0.49% respectively. US markets will remain closed today, in celebration of the US Independence Day holiday. Asia was mostly lower on Wednesday, with Japan’s Nikkei 225 falling by 0.31% but the Topix marginally rising. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng remained under pressure, tumbling by 1.26%. In Europe, all major indices are set to open lower today according to futures markets, albeit not significantly so.
  • COMMODITIES: Oil prices went for a ride yesterday. WTI climbed initially to touch a fresh multi-year high of $75.27, before it suddenly fell off the cliff. It violently dropped to $72.70 in a matter of minutes, only to recover most of its losses in the following hours to trade more or less unchanged. WTI and Brent crude are higher by 0.5% and 0.6% respectively today, with the fact that investors were so quick to buy the dip yesterday underscoring once more the bullish sentiment currently surrounding energy markets. In precious metals, gold is nearly 0.6% higher today, currently trading just above the $1,258 per troy ounce level. The area around $1,238 proved its validity as a strong support barrier yet again, with the metal’s rebound also aided by the correction lower in the US dollar (the two are inversely related).