- Inga Muller
- 16 Jan, 2024
- Frankfurt
European stocks turned lower amid rising tensions in the Middle East and worries of resurgent inflation after supply chains were disrupted for shipments between Asia and Europe following the persistent attacks in the Red Sea lanes.
The DAX index decreased 0.6% to 16,515.75, the CAC-40 index fell 0.5% to 7,376.57, and the FTSE 100 index inched lower by 0.6% to 7,552.54.
The yield on 10-year German bonds edged up to 2.18%; French bonds inched higher to 2.76%; the UK gilts decreased slightly to 3.78%; and Italian bonds increased to 3.80%.
Energy and mining companies traded mixed after crude oil and metal prices turned higher in volatile trading.
BP plc rose 0.4% to 454.05 pence, and Shell plc decreased 0.5% to 2,447.90 pence.
Glencore PLC dropped 0.8% to 441.30 pence, Anglo American increased 0.3% to 1,830.40 pence, and Antofagasta decreased 0.4% to 1,617.0 pence.
Banks headed lower after European policymakers pushed back against the timing of rate cuts this year.
Deutsche Bank declined 1.2% to €11.79, Banco Santander declined 1.7% to €3.70, and UniCredit fell 0.6% to €25.46.
Air France KLM declined 2.8% to €11.69 after the company withdrew from its existing air cargo arrangements with the French shipping and logistics company CMA CMG.
Hugo Boss AG plunged 12% to €58.06 after the German fashion group reported lower-than-expected fourth-quarter operating earnings in its preliminary results.
Ocado Group gained 5.5% to 653.20 pence after the online grocery shopping company reported a 10.9% increase in its fourth quarter revenue and estimated profit in the full year.
Spirent Communications plc increased 7% to 123.90 pence after the telecom testing company said it has started the new year with a growing order book and conditions are favorable for the full-year outlook.
- Bridgette Randall
- 16 Jan, 2024
- Frankfurt
European markets declined after investors scaled back hopes of rate cuts in the near future.
Benchmark indexes in Frankfurt, Paris, and London traded down amid growing worries of a wider war in the Middle East, fading hopes of rate cuts, and persistent economic growth worries.
European policymakers drummed up their campaign against rate-cut hopes, and French central bank Governor Francois Villeroy de Galhau said it is too early to declare victory over inflation.
ECB policymaker Joachim Nagel said it was too early to discuss rate cuts, emphasizing that inflation remains too high, while delivering his prepared remarks at a gathering in Davos. Switzerland.
But the central bank's next move is likely to cut rates at some point this year, Villeroy de Galhau added during his comments delivered in Davos.
Yesterday, Austria's central bank governor, Robert Holzmann, said investors should not count on the European Central Bank cutting rates at all this year.
Investors reviewed the latest update on German inflation and UK wage growth.
Germany's December Inflation Rate Confirmed
Germany's consumer price inflation accelerated to 3.7% in December from 3.2% in November, the Federal Statistics Office, or Destatis, confirmed Tuesday the preliminary estimate released on January 4.
UK Wage Growth Slowed
Regular pay for UK wage earners increased 6.6% from a year ago in three months to November, the Office for National Statistics reported Tuesday.
The increase in wages, excluding bonuses, slowed from the downwardly revised 7.2% in the previous three-month period.
Wages, including bonuses, rose 6.5% in the three months to November.
The unemployment rate held steady at 4.2%, matching the rate in the previous three-month period.
Europe Indexes and Yields
The DAX index decreased 0.6% to 16,515.75, the CAC-40 index fell 0.5% to 7,376.57, and the FTSE 100 index inched lower by 0.6% to 7,552.54.
The yield on 10-year German bonds edged up to 2.18%; French bonds inched higher to 2.76%; the UK gilts decreased slightly to 3.78%; and Italian bonds increased to 3.80%.
The euro edged lower to $1.08, the British pound inched lower to $1.267, and the U.S. dollar eased to 86.04 Swiss cents.
Brent crude advanced $0.78 to $78.90 a barrel, and the Dutch TTF natural gas decreased by €0.26 to €29.67 per MWh.
Europe Stock Movers
Energy and mining companies traded mixed after crude oil and metal prices turned higher in volatile trading.
BP plc rose 0.4% to 454.05 pence, and Shell plc decreased 0.5% to 2,447.90 pence.
Glencore PLC dropped 0.8% to 441.30 pence, Anglo American increased 0.3% to 1,830.40 pence, and Antofagasta decreased 0.4% to 1,617.0 pence.
Banks headed lower after European policymakers pushed back against the timing of rate cuts this year.
Deutsche Bank declined 1.2% to €11.79, Banco Santander declined 1.7% to €3.70, and UniCredit fell 0.6% to €25.46.
- Arjun Pandit
- 16 Jan, 2024
- Mumbai
Benchmark indexes in Asia traded down amid rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East.
Market indexes in Tokyo, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Seoul, and Mumbai fell after Houthi rebels launched attacks in the Red Sea targeting U.S.-controlled ships.
Moreover, more shipping companies are avoiding the Red Sea shipping lanes to the Suez Canal and diverting shipments along the coast of South Africa.
But the shipment rerouting is disrupting supply chains between Asia and Europe and increasing the cost and time of shipments from India and Asia.
On the economic front, investors reviewed the latest update on international trade and the wholesale price index by India.
The trade deficit in December declined to a three-month low of $19.8 billion, the Commerce Ministry said late Monday.
A separate report showed that India's wholesale inflation increased to 0.73% in December, the office of the Economic Adviser reported on Monday.
Wholesale inflation edged higher after food prices rose 5.4%, primary article prices increased 5.8%, but fuel and power prices edged down 2.4%.
The Sensex index increased 0.08% to 73,384.57, and the Nifty index rose 0.07% to 22,112.70.
On the Mumbai stock exchange, 273 stocks traded at their 52-week highs and 7 stocks traded at their 52-week lows.
The yield on the 10-year Indian government bonds eased 7.15%, and the Indian rupee edged lower to ₹82.94 against the U.S. dollar.
The Hang Seng index in Hong Kong fell 2.2% to 15,864.20 after property developers dropped a new low on debt default worries and a lack of government stimulus to spur demand.
The Hang Seng index dropped to a 14-month low and extended 2024 losses by 6%, after falling 14% in 2023 and for the fourth year in a row after foreign investors sold their holdings and avoided exposure to Chinese stocks.
The CSI 300 index in Shanghai traded down 0.2% to 3,275.57 ahead of the release of retail sales, GDP, and gross investment data on Wednesday.
China's economy is expected to expand at least 5.0% in 2023, according to economists interviewed by Ticker.com.
In Tokyo, the Nikkei index declined 0.5% to 35,721.08, and the index hovered near its 34-year high and traded in a tight range.
In Sydney, Australia, the ASX 200 index decreased 1% to 7,414.80 and dropped to a four-week low after energy and mining-related stocks led the decline.
- Arun Goswami
- 16 Jan, 2024
- Mumbai
Stocks in Mumbai turned lower amid rising tensions in the Middle East after Houthi rebels attacked a U.S. Navy ship in the Red Sea.
The growing attacks in the Red Sea are forcing shipping companies to divert shipments away from the Suze Canal, increasing shipment time and costs.
The Sensex index decreased 570.02 points to 71,925.24, and the Nifty index fell 176.65 points to 21,688.75.
On the Mumbai stock exchange, 273 stocks traded at their 52-week highs and 7 stocks traded at their 52-week lows.
Jio Financial Services declined 3.5% to ₹256.45 after the company reported quarterly results.
Consolidated revenue in the December quarter fell 32% from the previous quarter to ₹414.3 crore, and net income declined 56% to ₹293.8 crore.
HDFC Bank declined 0.3% to ₹1,666.75 ahead of the release of the company's quarterly results.
The largest private sector bank in India is expected to show a decline in earnings of around 1.3% from the previous quarter, when it reported earnings of ₹15,976 crore.
Angle One Limited dropped 9.4% to ₹3,493.05 after the stock brokerage company reported profit in the December quarter rose 14% to ₹260 crore.
Housing finance companies were the focus after the Reserve Bank of India matched the rules for attracting customer deposits with the recently revised rules for non-bank finance companies.
LIC Housing Finance rose 0.05% to ₹578.40, and Can Fin Homes added 0.3% to ₹766.40.
Aster DM Healthcare rose 8.7% to ₹434.75 after the company said it plans to distribute the majority of the proceeds from the sale of its business in the Middle East to shareholders through a special dividend of ₹120 per share.
Khanij Bidesh India signed an agreement with Argentina-controlled CAMYEN SE to explore four lithium mining blocks in the Catamarca province.
Khanij Bidesh is a joint venture between Nalco, Hindustan Copper, and the Mineral Exploration Company.
Nalco gained 4% to ₹141.20, and Hindustan Copper jumped 2.6% to ₹266.50.
India currently imports about $3 billion of lithium, and 95% of these imports originate in China.
The government has signed a similar lithium exploration deal with Australia to diversify its lithium sourcing.
Rail Vikas Nigam jumped 3% to ₹227.10, and the company is likely to win a ₹251 crore contract to develop a power transmission project in Madhya Pradesh.
BLS International Services increased 1% to ₹395.35 after the company's UAE subsidiary agreed to acquire iData Danismanlik for 50 million euros, or ₹450 crore.
IDATA provides visa application support services in Turkey.
- Barry Adams
- 15 Jan, 2024
- New York City
World markets closed mixed in Monday's trading, and the U.S. financial markets were closed for Martin Luther King's Day.
Market indexes in Tokyo continued to advance on the hopes that the Bank of Japan would keep its monetary stimulus intact despite the recent rise in inflation, but markets in China struggled after the People's Bank of China did not announce any economic stimulus measures while keeping the medium-term rates steady.
Asian markets have diverged over the last fifteen months, with the market indexes in India and Japan surging ahead, but the indexes in China continued to drift lower, extending losses for the fourth year in a row.
In Europe, market indexes struggled to advance after the German economy contracted in 2023 and eurozone industrial activities declined for the third month in a row.
German consumers are facing dual headwinds of rising interest rates and elevated inflation, and businesses are struggling with elevated input costs and weak domestic and external demands.
The eurozone economy is expected to struggle in 2024 amid weak consumer demand and high interest rates.
Moreover, the European Central Bank is likely to keep interest rates higher for longer in its efforts to bring down inflation to 2% while keeping the unemployment rate low and avoiding a full-blown recession.
European Markets Closed Down After Choppy Trading
European markets were on the defensive in Monday's trading, and investors reviewed the economic data from Germany and the eurozone.
Benchmark indexes in Frankfurt, Paris, and London declined about 0.3% after Germany's economy contracted in 2023 and wholesale prices fell at a slower pace in December.
Market indexes in Europe are expected to trade in a tight range, and the financial markets are closed on Martin Luther King Day.
In Asia, the Nikkei extended gains by 0.9% to 35,901.79, and the benchmark indexes traded at a new 34-year high on the expectation that the Bank of Japan is not likely to end its ultra-loose monetary policy soon.
Market indexes in Hong Kong and the mainland China declined after the People's Bank of China held its one-year medium-term loan rate at 2.5%, dashing hopes of an unexpected rate cut.
Markets in India inched higher into record territory after investors reacted to positive earnings from domestic corporations, and retail inflation stayed within the range preferred by the Reserve Bank of India.
German Economy Stalled In 2023
The German economy adjusted for inflation and fell by 0.3% in 2023, following a revised 1.8% expansion in 2022, the Federal Statistics Office, or Destatis, reported Monday.
The largest economy in the region faced multiple headwinds as consumers and businesses battled high inflation and rising interest rates, and weak external demand kept export activity growth in check.
Industrial output declined 2%, largely because of weaker production in the energy supply sector; manufacturing output fell 0.4% due to the ongoing weakness in vehicle manufacturing; and construction activities rose 0.2% despite high building costs and elevated interest rates.
Germany's economy at the end of 2023 was larger by 0.7% from its level in 2019, the year before the onset of the pandemic, when the economy plunged 3.8%.
Most service sectors expanded their economic activities in 2023, but economic growth slowed from the previous year.
On the demand side, private consumption adjusted for price declined 0.8%, investment fell 0.3%, and government spending dropped 1.7%, the first decline in 20 years after the government withdrew medical care provided during the coronavirus pandemic era between 2000 and 2022.
German Wholesale Prices Decline Extended to Ninth Month
Germany's wholesale price declined 2.6% from a year ago in December, Destatis said in a separate report released Monday.
The wholesale price declined, slowed from 3.6% in the previous month, and fell for the ninth month in a row.
On a monthly basis, prices fell 0.3% in December after falling at a 0.2% monthly rate in November.
Eurozone Activities Contracted Third Consecutive Month in November
Elsewhere in the region, eurozone industrial activities declined by 0.3% in November, Eurostat reported Monday.
Industrial activities declined for the third month in a row after durable consumer goods output declined at a faster pace of 2.0% compared to 1.0% in October.
The production of non-durable consumer goods output rose 1.2%, matching the same pace in October.
The industrial activities shrank by 6.8% from a year ago and extended the contraction for the ninth month in a row.
Europe Indexes and Yields
The DAX index decreased 0.5% to 16,626.08, the CAC-40 index fell 0.7% to 7,414.33, and the FTSE 100 index inched lower by 0.4% to 7,594.91.
The yield on 10-year German bonds edged up to 2.18%; French bonds inched higher to 2.71%; the UK gilts held steady at 3.80%; and Italian bonds increased to 3.78%.
The euro edged lower to $1.093, the British pound inched lower to $1.271, and the U.S. dollar eased to 85.44 Swiss cents.
Brent crude advanced $0.15 to $78.12 a barrel, and the Dutch TTF natural gas increased by €2.05 to €29.95 per MWh.
Taiwan Stocks Advance After DPP Wins Presidential Election
In Asia, Tokyo stock markets hovered near a 34-year high, and the Taiwan Weighted Index advanced 0.4% after the ruling Democratic Progressive Party won the presidential election for the third consecutive time.
William Lai Ching-te won the presidential election on Saturday by winning 40%, or 5.59 million votes, but neither of the three contesting parties won an outright majority in the Legislative Yuan or the governing parliament.
The DPP lost its majority in the 113-member legislative body to 51 seats from 61, and the rival KMT increased its tally by 14 to 52 seats.
Elsewhere in the region, the Hang Seng Index decreased 0.6% to 16,190.59 and the CSI 300 index dropped 0.2% to 3,278.51 after the People's Bank of China held its rates steady and dashed the hopes of a surprise rate cut.
The central bank held its one-year policy rate on medium-term lending facilities at 2.5%, and the central bank injected 216 billion yuan into the financial system via the facility.
Logan Group in Hong Kong traded up 5.5% to HK$0.63 after the struggling developer pledged to cut its total debt load by $3 billion and speed up its debt repayment plan.
Some key creditors agreed to the company's plan to repay offshore debt and a shareholder loan of $8 billion through cash and new securities over a nine-year period.
In Tokyo, the Nikkei index increased 1% to 35,930.42, and in Seoul trading, the KOSPI index declined 0.2% to 35,930.42.
Tech stocks led the gainers in Tokyo trading on the receding hopes of a rate cut by the U.S. Federal Reserve.
India Stocks Advanced On Earnings Optimism, Retail Inflation Accelerated
Stocks in Mumbai looked up after a week of volatile trading amid rising tensions in the Red Sea, and investors reviewed the latest update on inflation and industrial production data.
Consumer price inflation in December accelerated to 5.69%, following 5.55% in October, the statistical agency reported late Friday.
The rise in inflation was driven by elevated food prices following unseasonal rain in several parts of the nation, disrupting food supplies.
Despite the rise, inflation still stayed within the 2%–6% range preferred by the Reserve Bank.
Industrial production plunged to an increase of 2.4% in November from the revised 11.6% rise in October, the statistical agency announced in a separate report on Friday.
The growth in activities in manufacturing, mining, and electricity generation dropped sharply in the month.
The growth in manufacturing activities plunged to 1.2% from 6.7%, mining slowed to 6.8% from 9.7%, and electricity declined to 5.8% from 12.7% in the month a year ago.
India Indexes and Yields
The Sensex index increased 759.49 points to 73,327.94, and the Nifty index rose 202.95 points to 22,097.45.
On the Mumbai stock exchange, 459 stocks traded at their 52-week highs and 12 stocks traded at their 52-week lows.
The yield on the 10-year Indian government bonds edged up 7.17%, and the Indian rupee edged lower to ₹82.83 against the U.S. dollar.
The gold price increased by 0.4% to ₹62,591 per ten grams, and silver rose by 0.4% to ₹72,770 per kilo.
Crude oil increased by 0.2% to ₹6,204 per barrel, and natural gas fell by 0.7% to ₹263.60 per thermal unit.
- Inga Muller
- 15 Jan, 2024
- Frankfurt
European markets traded in a tight range with a downward bias after Germany's GDP shrank in 2023 and eurozone industrial activities declined for the third month in a row in December.
The DAX index increased 0.9% to 16,696.72, the CAC-40 index rose 1.1% to 7,469.05, and the FTSE 100 index inched higher by 0.7% to 7,629.48.
The yield on 10-year German bonds edged down to 2.16%; French bonds inched lower to 2.69%; the UK gilts edged down to 3.80%; and Italian bonds decreased to 3.76%.
Europe Stock Movers
Commerzbank AG advanced 1.7% to €11.54 on speculation that the company is in merger talks with Deutsche Bank.
Deutsche Bank declined 0.7% to €11.97.
Dassault Aviation dropped 5.7% to €178.80 after the French aircraft maker delivered fewer than expected aircrafts in 2023.
Rafael aircraft orders in 2023 declined to 60 compared to 92 in 2022 and 23 Falcon aircraft orders were received compared to 64 in the previous year.
Rafael aircraft deliveries decreased to 13 from 14 and Falcon aircraft deliveries eased to 26 from 32 in the previous year.
However, Rafael aircraft backlog at the end of 2023 increased to 211 from 164 and Falcon aircraft order rose to 84 from 87 a year ago.
Atos SE dropped 13.5% to €4.21 after the company said free cash flow is likely to be slightly lower than expected in the second half of the year.
Kontron AG rose 1.6% to €21.60 after the IoT company estimated net income in 2024 to exceed €87 million.
Filtronic Plc increased 3.8% to 21.81 pence after the maker of aerospace and defense infrastructure products won an order from QientiQ, a global defense company.
Crest Nicholson Holdings PLC dropped 5.4% to 206.80 pence after the homebuilder lowered its profit outlook.
PageGroup Plc decreased 2.2% to 446.45 pence after the UK-based recruiting company said current quarter earnings are likely to fall below its estimate on the weak demand.
- Bridgette Randall
- 15 Jan, 2024
- Frankfurt
European markets were on the defensive in Monday's trading, and investors reviewed the economic data from Germany and the eurozone.
Benchmark indexes in Frankfurt, Paris, and London declined about 0.3% after Germany's economy contracted in 2023 and wholesale prices fell at a slower pace in December.
Market indexes in Europe are expected to trade in a tight range, and the financial markets are closed on Martin Luther King Day.
In Asia, the Nikkei extended gains by 0.9% to 35,901.79, and the benchmark indexes traded at a new 34-year high on the expectation that the Bank of Japan is not likely to end its ultra-loose monetary policy soon.
Market indexes in Hong Kong and the mainland China declined after the People's Bank of China held its one-year medium-term loan rate at 2.5%, dashing hopes of an unexpected rate cut.
Markets in India inched higher into record territory after investors reacted to positive earnings from domestic corporations, and retail inflation stayed within the range preferred by the Reserve Bank of India.
German Economy Stalled In 2023
The German economy adjusted for inflation and fell by 0.3% in 2023, following a revised 1.8% expansion in 2022, the Federal Statistics Office, or Destatis, reported Monday.
The largest economy in the region faced multiple headwinds as consumers and businesses battled high inflation and rising interest rates, and weak external demand kept export activity growth in check.
Industrial output declined 2%, largely because of weaker production in the energy supply sector; manufacturing output fell 0.4% due to the ongoing weakness in vehicle manufacturing; and construction activities rose 0.2% despite high building costs and elevated interest rates.
Germany's economy at the end of 2023 was larger by 0.7% from its level in 2019, the year before the onset of the pandemic, when the economy plunged 3.8%.
Most service sectors expanded their economic activities in 2023, but economic growth slowed from the previous year.
On the demand side, private consumption adjusted for price declined 0.8%, investment fell 0.3%, and government spending dropped 1.7%, the first decline in 20 years after the government withdrew medical care provided during the coronavirus pandemic era between 2000 and 2022.
German Wholesale Prices Decline Extended to Ninth Month
Germany's wholesale price declined 2.6% from a year ago in December, Destatis said in a separate report released Monday.
The wholesale price declined, slowed from 3.6% in the previous month, and fell for the ninth month in a row.
On a monthly basis, prices fell 0.3% in December after falling at a 0.2% monthly rate in November.
Eurozone Activities Contracted Third Consecutive Month in November
Elsewhere in the region, eurozone industrial activities declined by 0.3% in November, Eurostat reported Monday.
Industrial activities declined for the third month in a row after durable consumer goods output declined at a faster pace of 2.0% compared to 1.0% in October.
The production of non-durable consumer goods output rose 1.2%, matching the same pace in October.
The industrial activities shrank by 6.8% from a year ago and extended the contraction for the ninth month in a row.
Europe Indexes and Yields
The DAX index decreased 0.3% to 16,660.10, the CAC-40 index fell 0.3% to 7,445.31, and the FTSE 100 index inched lower by 0.3% to 7,602.75.
The yield on 10-year German bonds edged up to 2.18%; French bonds inched higher to 2.71%; the UK gilts held steady at 3.80%; and Italian bonds increased to 3.78%.
The euro edged lower to $1.093, the British pound inched lower to $1.271, and the U.S. dollar eased to 85.44 Swiss cents.
Brent crude advanced $0.53 to $77.75 a barrel, and the Dutch TTF natural gas increased by €1.45 to €30.55 per MWh.
- Arjun Pandit
- 15 Jan, 2024
- Mumbai
In Asia, Tokyo stock markets hovered near a 34-year high, and the Taiwan Weighted Index advanced 0.4% after the ruling Democratic Progressive Party won the presidential election for the third consecutive time.
William Lai Ching-te won the presidential election on Saturday by winning 40%, or 5.59 million votes, but neither of the three contesting parties won an outright majority in the Legislative Yuan or the governing parliament.
The DPP lost its majority in the 113-member legislative body to 51 seats from 61, and the rival KMT increased its tally by 14 to 52 seats.
Elsewhere in the region, the Hang Seng Index decreased 0.6% to 16,190.59 and the CSI 300 index dropped 0.2% to 3,278.51 after the People's Bank of China held its rates steady and dashed the hopes of a surprise rate cut.
The central bank held its one-year policy rate on medium-term lending facilities at 2.5%, and the central bank injected 216 billion yuan into the financial system via the facility.
Logan Group in Hong Kong traded up 5.5% to HK$0.63 after the struggling developer pledged to cut its total debt load by $3 billion and speed up its debt repayment plan.
Some key creditors agreed to the company's plan to repay offshore debt and a shareholder loan of $8 billion through cash and new securities over a nine-year period.
In Tokyo, the Nikkei index increased 1% to 35,930.42, and in Seoul trading, the KOSPI index declined 0.2% to 35,930.42.
Tech stocks led the gainers in Tokyo trading on the receding hopes of a rate cut by the U.S. Federal Reserve.
India Stocks Advanced On Earnings Optimism, Retail Inflation Accelerated
Stocks in Mumbai looked up after a week of volatile trading amid rising tensions in the Red Sea, and investors reviewed the latest update on inflation and industrial production data.
Consumer price inflation in December accelerated to 5.69%, following 5.55% in October, the statistical agency reported late Friday.
The rise in inflation was driven by elevated food prices following unseasonal rain in several parts of the nation, disrupting food supplies.
Despite the rise, inflation still stayed within the 2%–6% range preferred by the Reserve Bank.
Industrial production plunged to an increase of 2.4% in November from the revised 11.6% rise in October, the statistical agency announced in a separate report on Friday.
The growth in activities in manufacturing, mining, and electricity generation dropped sharply in the month.
The growth in manufacturing activities plunged to 1.2% from 6.7%, mining slowed to 6.8% from 9.7%, and electricity declined to 5.8% from 12.7% in the month a year ago.
India Indexes and Yields
The Sensex index increased 532.73 points to 73,100.68, and the Nifty index rose 140.25 points to 22,034.90.
On the Mumbai stock exchange, 459 stocks traded at their 52-week highs and 12 stocks traded at their 52-week lows.
The yield on the 10-year Indian government bonds edged up 7.17%, and the Indian rupee edged lower to ₹82.83 against the U.S. dollar.
The gold price increased by 0.4% to ₹62,591 per ten grams, and silver rose by 0.4% to ₹72,770 per kilo.
Crude oil increased by 0.2% to ₹6,204 per barrel, and natural gas fell by 0.7% to ₹263.60 per thermal unit.
- Arun Goswami
- 15 Jan, 2024
- Mumbai
Stocks in Mumbai advanced and investors reacted to quarterly results from Wipro, HCL Technology, Infosys, TCS, and Avenue Supermarts.
The Sensex index increased 532.73 points to 73,100.68, and the Nifty index rose 140.25 points to 22,034.90.
On the Mumbai stock exchange, 459 stocks traded at their 52-week highs and 12 stocks traded at their 52-week lows.
Tech services stocks extended gains for the second day in a row after Wipro and HCL reported mixed results but exceeded market expectations.
Infosys jumped 2% to a record intra-day high of ₹1,646.0, and TCS advanced 0.8% to ₹3,914.35.
HCL Technology advanced 2.5% to a record intra-day high of ₹1,579.60 after the company reported quarterly results.
Revenue in the December quarter rose 6.5% from a year ago to ₹28,446 crore, and net profit jumped 6.2% to ₹4,350 crore.
On a sequential basis, revenue increased 6.7% and net profit advanced 13.5%.
Wipro soared 5.9% to ₹492.85 after the company reported quarterly results that were ahead of market expectations.
Net profit in the December quarter declined 12% from a year ago and fell 1.2% from the previous quarter to ₹2,700 crore.
The company also estimated revenue in the March quarter to be between a decline of 1.5% and a rise of 0.5% based on the expectations of new client wins in 2024.
Bharat Heavy Electricals increased 1.8% to ₹200.0 after the company won an order worth ₹15,000 crore to build the Talabira Thermal Power Project from NLC India.
Avenue Supermarts gained 0.5% to ₹3,860.05 after the company reported strong quarterly results on Saturday.
Revenue in the December quarter increased 17.3% to ₹13,572.5 crore, and net profit advanced 17% to ₹690.4 crore.
Goodluck India jumped 2% to ₹1,121.40 after the company's board approved an institutional offering of up to ₹200 crore at an offering price of ₹989.40 per share, a discount of 10% from the Friday's closing price of ₹1,100.50.
Avalon Technology advanced 3.5% to ₹560.95 after the company was awarded a strategic manufacturing partner by the Centre for Development for Advanced Computing, an R&D arm of the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology.
Man Industries increased 8% to ₹364.70 after the company won new orders worth ₹400 crore, increasing its total orders to be completed in the next six months to ₹1,300 crore.
- Barry Adams
- 12 Jan, 2024
- New York City
Major averages on Wall Street advanced in early trading on the final trading day of this week, and investors digested the latest earnings results from banks and airlines.
JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, and Bank of America reported sharply lower earnings from a year ago after banks took hefty charges linked to the regional bank crisis in 2023.
Wells Fargo reported higher earnings, helped by cost-cutting initiatives and higher interest rates compared to the previous year.
Delta Air Lines reported sharply higher earnings on strong travel demand and a record number of passengers paying higher ticket prices for premium services.
The S&P 500 index and the Nasdaq Composite advanced more than 0.4% after lower-than-expected wholesale inflation data.
Producer price index decreased 0.1% from the previous month in December, matching the rate in the previous month, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday.
The measure of wholesale inflation rose 1% from a year ago after rising at a 0.8% rate in the previous month.
Core inflation decelerated to 1.8% from 2.0% on an annual basis.
U.S. Indexes and Yields
The S&P 500 index increased 0.4% to 4,798.95, and the Nasdaq Composite rose 0.5% to 15,044.61.
The yield on 2-year Treasury notes decreased to 4.27%. 10-year Treasury notes edged down to 3.99%, and 30-year Treasury bonds eased to 4.21%.
WTI crude oil increased $2.52 to $74.44 a barrel, and natural gas prices increased 8 cents to $3.17 a thermal unit.
Gold increased by $21.79 to $2,048.90 an ounce, and investors debated the future interest rate path.
The dollar index, which weighs the U.S. dollar against a basket of foreign currencies, edged lower to 102.52.
U.S. Stock Movers
JP Morgan Chase rose 2.1% to $173.75 after the bank reported quarterly results and a rise in adjusted earnings, excluding fees paid to the government tied to the seizures of regional banks.
Revenue in the fourth quarter increased 12% to $39.94 billion, and net income declined 15% to $9.31 billion, or $3.04 per share.
Wells Fargo declined 1.1% to $48.46 despite the bank reporting higher earnings in the fourth quarter, but the bank warned that net interest income in 2024 is likely to be lower than the previous year.
Revenue in the fourth quarter increased 2% to $20.48 billion, and net income rose to $3.45 billion, or 86 cents, from $3.16 billion, or 75 cents, a year ago.
Net interest income in the quarter declined 5% from a year ago to $12.78 billion, and the bank warned that level could decline between 7% and 9% on an annual basis from $52.4 billion in 2023.
Citigroup rose 2.2% to $53.21 after the bank reported a quarterly loss as the company booked charges linked to restructuring, overseas risks, and last year's regional banking crisis.
Revenue in the fourth quarter decreased 3% to $17.4 billion, net income swung to a loss of $1.8 billion from a profit of $3.5 billion, and diluted earnings per share declined to ($1.16) from $1.16 a year ago.
Bank of America decreased 2.7% to $32.25 after the bank reported lower quarterly earnings because of one-time charges assessed by the FDIC and transitioning away from the London Interbank Offered Rate.
Revenue in the quarter increased to $22 billion, net income declined 50% to $3.1 billion from $7.1 billion, and diluted earnings per share dropped to 35 cents from 85 cents a year ago.
The charges in the quarter include a $1.6 billion pre-tax charge to transition away from LIBOR and a special fee of $2.1 billion charged by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. to rescue Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank.
Delta Air Lines declined 5.5% to $39.92 after the international carrier reported a sharply higher profit but lowered its 2024 outlook.
Operating income in the fourth quarter increased by 6% to $14.2 billion from $13.4 billion, net income soared to $2.03 billion from $828 million, and diluted earnings per share rose to $3.16 from $1.29.
The company guided full-year 2024 earnings to range between $6.0 and $7.0 per share, lower than the previous estimate of at least $7 per share released last year.
Revenue in the first quarter of 2024 is expected to increase between 3% and 6%, and earnings per share between 25 cents and 50 cents.