(Bloomberg) — European stocks snapped two days of declines, with technology leading the advance amid hopes that US curbs on chip equipment sales to China may prove lighter than feared.
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The Stoxx 600 index (^STOXX) climbed 0.5%, with tech stocks rallying the most in two weeks. Additional curbs the US is weighing on sales of semiconductor equipment and AI memory chips to China would stop short of some stricter measures previously considered, Bloomberg News reported. US equity futures ticked higher, with no cash trading later due to the Thanksgiving holiday.
Yields on benchmark French bonds rose amid worries that a budget standoff may topple the government. The rate on 10-year French notes, regarded as among the safest in the euro area, climbed to 3.03%, the same as comparable Greek bonds, which only last year were still classified as junk. Trading in Treasuries is shut.
The political turmoil in France is also weighing on the nation’s stocks, which are set for their worst under-performance against European peers since 2010.
Chinese stocks led declines in Asia Thursday as traders awaited signals of further stimulus from policymakers in Beijing ahead of a key economic meeting next month.
Usually held in December, China’s Central Economic Work Conference typically offers a blueprint on monetary, fiscal and various industrial policies for the coming year.
Talk of sanctions has underscored the persistent threat to already fragile trade relations between the US and China, weighing on sentiment in the region. Asian equities were on pace for their first back-to-back monthly drawdown this year following the dollar’s recent advance and concerns over escalating trade tensions.
Despite optimism on the potential for further stimulus from Beijing, “there are increased concerns and frustrations,” from investors, Winnie Wu, China equity strategist for Bank of America Securities, said on Bloomberg Television. The potential for further support and the prospect of US tariffs on China mean even long-term investors “are focusing on the next three to six months, or even three to six weeks,” she said.
On the monetary policy front, a pick-up in the Federal Reserve’s preferred gauge of underlying inflation is reinforcing the case for policymakers to proceed gradually with further interest-rate cuts. Traders are also weighing the expected impact of Donald Trump’s administration picks, with the US president-elect’s policies expected to reinforce price pressures.
What’s going on here?European markets rallied, with the STOXX 600 index climbing 0.6%, as tech stocks buoyed by positive chip export news from the US helped a
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