European stocks fall, US futures advance

BLOOMBERG

European stocks fell as investors awaited key rates decisions in the region. US equity futures climbed, signalling a recovery following a tumultuous day of losses on Wall Street.
The Stoxx Europe 600 Index slid 0.5% before a policy announcement from the Bank of England (BOE). The Swiss central bank raised its key rate by 50 basis points and signalled more hikes to come. A decision is due in Norway. Banking stocks were among the biggest decliners, following weakness in their US peers. Contracts on the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq 100 advanced at least 0.7%. An index of Asian shares rose more than 1% as gauges in Hong Kong and mainland China rallied.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen told lawmakers that the government wasn’t considering “blanket” deposit insurance to stabilise the banking system, sending stocks in the sector rapidly lower. At around the same time, following the Federal Reserve’s expected 25-basis-point hike, Chair Jerome Powell was pushing back against bets for rate cuts this year and said he was prepared to keep raising borrowing costs until inflation showed signs of cooling.
Weakness in the dollar extended to a sixth day, the longest losing streak since April 2021, with the greenback lower against all of its Group-of-10 currency counterparts. The Swiss franc reversed an earlier drop against the euro after the Swiss National Bank’s announcement. Treasury yields ticked higher, while German and UK government bonds rose.
The swap market shows investors are split on the chances that Fed officials will add another 25 basis points to their benchmark in May. Despite Powell’s guidance, expectations for cuts have deepened, with the market suggesting that the effective fed funds rate will drop to around 4.1% in December.
“I would not expect the market to take these rate cuts out in the near term and could very well price in more cuts if the data deteriorates from here,” Matthew Hornbach, global head of macro strategy at Morgan Stanley, told Bloomberg Television.
Powell himself, though, said in response to questioning that officials “just don’t” see cuts this year and that they will raise higher than expected if that is needed. “Rate cuts are not in our base case,” he said. Investors were on tenterhooks awaiting another report from Hindenburg Research, the US short seller that targeted Gautam Adani’s group earlier this year. There were no details on the subject of the new report.

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