The European Central Bank should cut interest rates in June to avoid falling behind the inflation curve, according to policymaker François Villeroy de Galhau.
“The question is the next Governing Council which will be early June … and here barring a major surprise we should cut rates because we are now confident enough and increasingly confident about the disinflationary path in the euro area,” Bank of France Governor Villeroy told CNBC’s Karen Tso on Thursday.
— Sam Meredith
U.S. stocks kicked off Thursday’s session higher.
The Dow traded 0.3% higher shortly after 9:30 a.m. ET. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite each added around 0.2%.
— Alex Harring
Shares of Swiss engineering firm ABB rose 5.5% after the company reported an expectation-beating rise in operating profit.
On the other end of the Stoxx 600, British biopharma firm Sartorius Stedim fell 13% after reporting a fall in first-quarter sales and net income.
— Karen Gilchrist
Stocks appear to have lost some momentum in recent weeks, with the S&P 500 on pace for its third straight week of losses. But Wolfe Research said it remains bullish on equities.
“Over the near term, our sense is that U.S. equity markets are likely to experience some additional downward pressure,” Chris Senyek wrote on Thursday. “However, over the intermediate-term, we continue to believe that the Market Cycle will have the biggest impact on overall equity market returns, sector rotation, and thematic performance.”
In fact, Senyek said markets remain in what the firm calls the early acceleration phase, a period when equity returns have “historically been robust and it’s paid to be cyclically-positioned.” He added traders should remain in short-cycle industrials, which are especially sensitive to the economy in the near term, as well as analog semiconductors and energy services.
— Sarah Min
The Norges Bank, Norway’s central bank, in Oslo, Norway, on Tuesday, Oct. 17, 2023.
Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Norway’s giant sovereign wealth fund on Thursday reported first-quarter profit of 1.21 trillion kroner ($109.9 billion), supported by robust returns on its investments in technology stocks.
“Our equity investments had a very strong return in the first quarter, particularly driven by the tech sector,” Trond Grande, deputy CEO of the fund, said in a statement.
Norway’s sovereign wealth fund, the world’s largest, was established in the 1990s to invest the surplus revenues of the country’s oil and gas sector. To date, the fund has put money in more than 8,800 companies in more than 70 countries around the world.
— Sam Meredith
Nile Rodgers from the band Nile Rodgers & Chic performs at Harvest Rock 2023 on October 28, 2023 in Adelaide, Australia.
Marc Grimwade | Wireimage | Getty Images
London-listed Hipgnosis Songs Fund, the music intellectual property investment company founded by Merck Mercuriadis and Nile Rodgers in 2018, announced Thursday its board has recommended a sale to music rights investor Concord — valuing the firm at $1.4 billion.
Shares of the FTSE 250 constituent were 31% higher at 8:30 a.m. U.K. time Thursday.
Hipgnosis snapped up song rights for high-profile artists including the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Mark Ronson, Shakira, Neil Young and Blondie, but has been mired in financial reporting issues, while its pre-tax operating loss widened in 2023 to $86.63 million.
The valuation is the equivalent of £0.932 ($1.16) per share, a 32.2% premium on Wednesday’s closing price. Financing for the deal will be supported by Concord’s partner Apollo Capital Management, the U.S. private equity giant.
In a release, the companies said Concord had a “proven track record of strategic acquisitions and catalogue expansion” and that the “creators connected to the rights” would benefit from the deal.
It also said that to achieve a “material improvement in the share price,” the company needed “substantial financial and governance changes to improve its financial performance.”
— Jenni Reid
European stocks were cautiously higher early Thursday, with the Stoxx 600 index up 0.25% at 8:13 a.m. in London and sectors trading mixed.
Major bourses climbed, with France’s CAC 40 up 0.5%, the U.K.’s FTSE 100 up 0.5% and Germany’s DAX up 0.3%.
Stoxx 600 index.
The British pound was higher against the U.S. dollar and euro Thursday morning, extending Wednesday gains on the back of higher-than-expected U.K. inflation data which pushed market expectations for interest rate cuts later in the year.
Sterling was up 0.27% against the greenback at $1.248 at 7:30 a.m. in London, and 0.1% higher against the euro at 1.167.
— Jenni Reid
First-quarter earnings season is beginning to ramp up in Europe, with reporting from the likes of Swiss engineering firm ABB and telecom giant Nokia on Thursday.
ABB reported flat revenue for the period of $7.87 billion, and an 11% rise in operating profit to $1.41 billion, ahead of expectations.
Finland’s Nokia missed market expectations for operating profit, according to Reuters, as net sales tumbled 19%.
— Jenni Reid
Crude oil futures fell more than 3% Wednesday as the market dismissed the risk of a wider war between Israel and Iran that could disrupt supplies.
The West Texas Intermediate contract for May delivery lost $2.76, or 3.23%, to $82.60 a barrel. June Brent futures were down $2.87, or 3.19%, at $87.15 a barrel. U.S. oil and the global benchmark are down more than 3.5% for the week.
“Theories of Iran-Israel tension disrupting oil supplies have fizzled out,” said Manish Raj, managing director of Velandera Energy Partners. “Peace may have come to an end, but oil continues to flow,” he said.
— Spencer Kimball
Morgan Stanley and HSBC are cutting dozens of investment banking jobs in the Asia-Pacific region this week, according to a Reuters report.
Citing sources, Reuters said this comes as the two banks ramp up cost-cutting, with weaker deal-making and sluggish markets in China and Hong Kong weighing on business prospects.
Morgan Stanley is cutting at least 50 investment banking jobs in the region starting this week, according to the report, affecting around 13% of its Asia investment banking workforce of 400.
HSBC reportedly started layoffs on Tuesday, and around 30 dealmakers are expected to leave the company.
— Lim Hui Jie
Analysts have lowered their expectations on several global stocks this week by cutting their price targets.
The price target changes come ahead of the next earnings season covering the first quarter of this year.
CNBC Pro screened for global stocks in the MSCI World index that have received price target downgrades over the past seven days and are yet to report earnings.
CNBC Pro subscribers can read more about the 10 stocks here.
— Ganesh Rao
European markets are expected to open higher Tuesday.
The U.K.’s FTSE 100 index is expected to open 37 points higher at 8,301, Germany’s DAX up 45 points at 18,217, France’s CAC 14 points higher at 8,009 and Italy’s FTSE MIB up 79 points at 33,775, according to data from IG.
On Tuesday, earnings are set to come from BP, S4 Capital, Siemens Healthineers, Deutsche Post, Infineon, Bouygues, UBS, Adecco, Banco de Sabadell and Unicredit, among others.
— Holly Ellyatt
Beko Europe has announced the closure of two sites resulting in nearly 2,000 redundancies. ADVERTISEMENTAt a meeting in Rome with Unions at the Min
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