European stocks rise as traders await fresh batch of tech earnings

European stocks rose on Monday, as investors looked ahead to earnings reports later this week from US technology titans Alphabet and Facebook owner Meta.

The regional Stoxx 600 index was up 1 per cent in early dealings after closing 1 per cent lower on Friday. London's FTSE 100 added 0.3 per cent. In Asia, Hong Kong's Hang Seng and Tokyo's Nikkei 225 both traded 1.1 per cent higher, with the Hang Seng Tech sub-index rallying more than 2 per cent.

Investors have had to navigate increasingly choppy conditions since the start of the year, balancing persistently high rates of inflation and the likelihood of tighter monetary conditions with a mixed set of fourth-quarter results from Wall Street's biggest companies.

Apple, the world's most valuable company by market capitalisation, last week posted record revenue in the fourth quarter of 2021, sending its share price 7 per cent higher and helping Wall Street's technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite index to a small marginal gain for the week. Fellow tech behemoths Google parent Alphabet and Meta are set to reveal their latest quarterly figures on Tuesday and Wednesday, respectively.

The index has nonetheless slipped some 12 per cent this calendar year, dragged lower by the potential for higher borrowing costs to erode the present value of companies' future cash flows, and by disappointing results from the likes of Netflix. The broader-based S&P 500 index -- which hit a record high as recently as January 3 -- had fallen 7 per cent over the same period as of Friday's close.

Those declines have come as officials at the US Federal Reserve have signalled that interest rates may have to rise faster and more aggressively to tackle inflationary pressures in the world's largest economy.

Raphael Bostic, president of the Fed's Atlanta branch, stuck to his call for three quarter-point interest rate increases in 2022 in an interview with the Financial Times over the weekend. But he said a more aggressive approach could include raising the federal funds rate by half a percentage point, double its typical amount.

However, Randeep Somel, fund manager at M&G Investments, said the Fed remained "very conscious of making a policy error and having to go back and cut rates if the market slows down".

January's decline, he added, constituted an adjustment rather than the start of a bear market proper, and "the market will settle down".

Investors are also weighing up how to respond, should a conflict erupt in Ukraine. Oil prices could rise above $100 a barrel if Russian president Vladimir Putin were to cut natural gas supplies to Europe, according to Anatole Kaletsky at Gavekal Research.

"This would result in a global inflation crisis comparable to the one that followed the 1973-74 Arab oil embargo," Kaletsky wrote in a note on Monday. "A drastic tightening of monetary policy and a profound bear market both in bonds and equities would likely follow."

Brent, the international benchmark, rose 1 per cent to $90.89 a barrel on Monday.

In government debt markets, the yield on the two-year US Treasury note, which closely tracks inflation expectations, rose 0.02 percentage points to 1.19 per cent. The 10-year yield was broadly steady at 1.77 per cent. Bond yields move inversely to prices.

Belum ada Komentar untuk "European stocks rise as traders await fresh batch of tech earnings"

Posting Komentar

Advertisement