ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) -TRADING DAY
Making sense of the forces driving global markets
By Jamie McGeever, Markets Columnist
The S&P 500 and Nasdaq leaped to new highs on Tuesday thanks to a surge in Nvidia shares, but closed mixed as investors digested a pick-up in U.S. inflation, a raft of major U.S. financial firms’ earnings and spiking bond yields around the world, especially in Japan.
More on that below, but in my column today I ask whether there is a sense of tariff complacency creeping into markets, as investors increasingly bet on the ‘TACO’ trade.
If you have more time to read, here are a few articles I recommend to help you make sense of what happened in markets today.
1. For Europe, 30% US tariff would hammer trade, forceexport model rethink 2. Trump’s fresh Fed attack simmers in markets: Mike Dolan 3. Investors seek protection from risk of Fed chief’souster 4. Fed’s inflation fears start to be realized with June CPIincrease 5. What the rest of the world can learn from ‘SwissExceptionalism’: Jen
Today’s Key Market Moves
* The Nasdaq gains 0.2% but other U.S. indices fall, withthe Russell 2000 small cap index losing 1.7%. Tech is the onlysector on the S&P 500 to rise. * Nvidia shares rise 4% to a new high above $172, pushingits market cap further above the $4 trillion mark. * Britain’s FTSE 100 rises above 9000 points for the firsttime ever but ends down 0.6%, its biggest fall sincepost-Liberation Day turmoil in early April. * Japanese Government Bond yields hit fresh highs. The10-year yield is its highest since 2008 at 1.595%, and the 20-and 30-year yields at record peaks of 2.65% and 3.20%,respectively. * The dollar index rises for a seventh session, its best runsince last October.
Bond blues mar stocks’ joy
It was a mixed bag on world markets on Tuesday.
Two of Wall Street’s three main indices, Britain’s FTSE 100 and the MSCI World index hit fresh peaks, yet U.S. inflation rose, bond yields marched higher and investors gave a thumbs down to seemingly solid earnings from U.S. financial firms.
Equity market strength was mostly in tech, after AI darling and chipmaker Nvidia said overnight it plans to resume sales of its H20 AI chips to China. Hong Kong’s tech index got the ball rolling with a 2.8% rise, and tech was the only sector on the S&P 500 to close in the green.
But if the market’s glass was half full at the start of the day, it was half empty by the end of it. U.S. inflation was broadly in line with expectations, yet investors focused on the upside risks; U.S. bank earnings were solid, but financials were among the biggest decliners.