Jan 12 - Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of markets brought to you by Reuters reporters. You can share your thoughts with us at markets.research@thomsonreuters.com
HEADING TOWARDS THE FLOATATION MARK (0749 GMT)
European futures are in an upbeat mood this morning and it seems the continent's main equity benchmark could recoup most of its 2022 losses in morning trading.
The STOXX 600 is down close to 1% so far this year but futures are rising close to 0.9% which would fill in most of the gap.
Of course, all eyes are on the U.S. inflation data expected later today and the mood could obviously change quickly after that.
There's also plenty of corporate news to digest, such as British supermarket group Sainsbury's raising its full-year profit forecast and Norwegian energy major Equinor announcing an impairment charge of around $1.8 billion.
On the tech front, French cloud computing company OVHcloud reported a rise of 13.9% in its first-quarter revenue and stuck to its full-year objectives, while Europe's largest meals delivery company Just Eat Takeaway.com also maintained its financial forecasts.
(Julien Ponthus)
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HUMBLE AND NIMBLE (0734 GMT)
"We are going to have to be humble but a bit nimble".
Arguably not much of a hint on the timing of rate hike lift-off but investors seemed happy enough with Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell's congressional hearing yesterday to eagerly buy the dip on Wall Street.
The upbeat sentiment, helped by the Bank of Japan offering its most optimistic view of the country's regional economy in more than eight years, spread to other asset classes with commodities and oil ticking higher while the dollar hit a six-week low and Asian bourses thrived.
Quite crucially, following the Nasdaq's positive close, tech stocks in Hong Kong made a 4% jump, which suggests that stock pickers aren't yet writing the sector off just yet.
The first days of trading of the year had indeed exposed some early cycle teething problems with volatility hitting tech shares for which investors are typically reluctant to pay hefty premiums when interest rates are headed higher.
But while some traders seem to be comfortable with rising bond yield and gently biting into the comparative appeal of stocks, there's still some palpable angst on how smooth the tightening cycle will prove to be for markets.
Of course, today's Chinese factory-gate prices and consumer inflation rising more slowly than expected in December came as a relief but there's another major test coming up today for the smooth tightening cycle narrative.
Apart from German wholesale inflation, U.S. December consumer inflation data will be released with headline CPI expected to hit a whopping 7% year-on-year.
As spectacular as it might be the reading seems currently priced in and expectations are still for inflation to gradually peak as we move further into 2022.
U.S. benchmark 10-year yields have slightly retreated from the 1.808% reached on Monday, the highest since January 2020.
In Europe, where the European Central Bank is nowhere near a rate hike and at the earliest expected to move in 2023, German bond yields are reluctant to creep out of negative territory.
Key developments that should provide more direction to markets on Wednesday: -NATO ambassadors and Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov meet -ECB Board Member Andrea Enria and Fed Minneapolis President Neel Kashkari speak -Emerging markets: Poland Central Bank -US 10-year note auction
(Julien Ponthus)
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