Banks in focus, oil gains... Fed is weaker on banks says former official...
Banks, central and otherwise, are key factors in the markets Thursday.
Comments made by central bankers in Canada, Europe and the UK are among those in focus for their more hawkish overtones. Interest rate rises are now looking more likely after almost a decade of the low-rate environment.
Asian indexes closed mostly higher with a stronger lead from Wall Street, the central banks, and regional data all boosting sentiment.
Oil prices were up again overnight and there is also great interest in buyback plans announced by 34 major US banks and approved by the Fed.
European indexes are trending lower with London looking better. UK mortgage approvals jumped in May, outstripping expectations. Eurozone business consumer confidence have also gained but the bloc’s inflation figures are keenly awaited.
Wall Street and Toronto are expected to open flat. US GDP data is due.
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Latest |
1 month ago |
1 year ago |
North America (previous session) |
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US Dow Jones |
21,454.61 (+0.68 per cent) |
+1.78 per cent |
+21.25 per cent |
TSX Composite |
15,355.58 (+0.49 per cent) |
-0.43 per cent |
+9.40 per cent |
Europe (at 5.00am ET) |
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UK FTSE |
7,413.42 (+0.35 per cent) |
-1.78 per cent |
+16.56 per cent |
German DAX |
12,646.00 (-0.01 per cent) |
+0.14 per cent |
+31.56 per cent |
Asia (at close) |
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China CSI 300 |
3,668.83 (+0.62 per cent) |
+5.41 per cent |
+16.42 per cent |
Japan Nikkei |
20,220.30 (+0.45 per cent) |
+2.73 per cent |
+29.89 per cent |
Other Data (at 5.00am ET) |
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Oil (Brent) |
Oil (WTI) |
Gold |
Can. Dollar |
47.49 (+0.36 per cent) |
44.97 (+0.51 per cent) |
1246.70 (-0.19 per cent) |
U$0.7671 |
Aus. Dollar |
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U$0.7675 |
Fed is weaker on banks says former official
Capital requirements for major US banks have softened according to a previous stress tester for the Chicago Fed.
Carl Tannerbaum, now chief economist at Northern Trust, told CNBC that the Fed’s approval of the capital plans of 34 banks shows how things have changed recently, including the economy.
"The banks have built up a great deal of capital since the crisis and that's provided a great buffer that separates the shareholders from the public … So banks are in a very good position to begin returning some of that capital to shareholders," he told CNBC.