Current:Home > reviewsStock market today: World shares are mixed, while Tokyo’s benchmark extends its New Year rally -WealthMindset Learning
Stock market today: World shares are mixed, while Tokyo’s benchmark extends its New Year rally
View
Date:2025-04-15 21:00:25
BANGKOK (AP) — World shares were mixed on Friday, while Tokyo’s benchmark extended its New Year rally, trading well above 35,000 and at its highest level since 1990.
U.S. futures inched higher and oil prices surged more than $1 a barrel.
Germany’s DAX jumped 1% to 16,710.98 and the CAC40 in Paris gained 1.2% to 7,474.57. Britain’s FTSE 100 climbed 0.8% to 7,635.15. The future for the S&P 500 was up 0.1% while that for the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.2%.
Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 gained 1.5% to 35,577.11 capping a week of strong gains that have taken it to levels not seen since 1990, when Japan’s asset bubbles were beginning to deflate at the outset of an era of faltering growth.
The yen’s weakness against the U.S. dollar has boosted Japanese exporters like industrial robot maker Fanuc Corp., whose shares rose 2.1% on Friday.
Taiwan’s Taiex declined 0.2% to 17,512.83 on the eve of presidential and legislative elections that will test the self-governed island’s relations both with Beijing and with Washington.
China reported that its exports and imports edged higher in December in a sign that its economic recovery remains uneven, though global demand may be reviving as central banks halt their latest round of inflation-fighting interest rate increases.
Consumer prices fell 0.3% in December, the third consecutive month of declines and a sign of persisting weakness in demand. The producer price index — which measures prices that factories charge wholesalers — fell 2.7% in the 15th straight month that it has fallen.
Some of that growth was fueled by a nearly 64% increase in auto exports in 2023, to 4.1 million passenger cars, the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers reported Thursday.
The Hang Seng in Hong Kong shed early gains, falling 0.4% to 16,244.58. The Shanghai Composite index slipped 0.2% to 2,881.98.
The Kospi in South Korea slipped 0.1% to 2,537.17, while Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 also edged 0.1% lower, to 7,501.40.
India’s Sensex advanced 1.4% and Bangkok’s SET rose 0.4%.
On Thursday, Wall Street wobbled after the update on inflation raised questions about when the Federal Reserve could begin the cuts to interest rates that investors crave so much.
The S&P 500 slipped 0.1% and the Dow rose less than 0.1%. The Nasdaq composite edged up by less than 0.1%.
Stocks had been roaring toward record heights on expectations that a cooldown in inflation would convince the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates sharply in 2024, which would boost prices for investments. Thursday morning’s inflation report showed U.S. consumers paid prices that were 3.4% higher overall in December than a year earlier. That’s an acceleration from November’s 3.1% inflation rate and a touch warmer than economists expected.
But trends underneath the surface may have been a bit more encouraging. After stripping out food and fuel prices, which can shift sharply from month to month, the rise in prices from November into December was close to economists’ expectations.
The inflation data sent Treasury yields on a jagged run in the bond market. After sinking from Wednesday night into Thursday, they jumped immediately after the report’s release but then began yo-yoing. By late afternoon, they were lower, helping stock indexes to recover much of their earlier losses.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury was steady at 3.97% early Friday. It’s down from more than 5% in October.
Early Friday, a barrel of benchmark U.S. crude was up $1.68 at $73.70, a 2.3% jump. It rose 65 cents to $72.02 on Thursday. Brent crude, the international standard, gained $1.63 to $79.02 per barrel.
In currency dealings, the U.S. dollar was at 145.00 Japanese yen, down from 145.28. The euro rose to $1.0977 from $1.0971.
veryGood! (9827)
Related
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- Jimmy Buffett, 'Margaritaville' singer and mogul, dies: 'He lived his life like a song'
- Miranda Kerr is pregnant! Model shares excitement over being a mom to 4 boys
- A Russian spacecraft crashed on the moon last month. NASA says it's discovered where.
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Jimmy Buffett Dead at 76: Jon Bon Jovi, Elton John and Others Honor Margaritaville Singer
- 1 dead, another injured in shooting during Louisiana high school football game
- Lawmaker who owns casino resigns from gambling study commission amid criminal investigation
- Sam Taylor
- AI project imagines adult faces of children who disappeared during Argentina’s military dictatorship
Ranking
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- No Black women CEOs left in S&P 500 after Walgreens CEO Rosalind Brewer resigns
- Suspected robbers stop a van in Colorado and open fire; all 8 in van hurt in crash getting away
- Why Wishbone Kitchen TikToker Meredith Hayden Is Stepping Away From Being a Private Chef
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- More than 85,000 highchairs are under recall after two dozen reports of falls
- Utah, Nebraska headline college football winners and losers from Thursday of Week 1
- Man convicted of 4-month-old son’s 1997 death dies on Alabama death row
Recommendation
The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
Some businesses in Vermont’s flood-wracked capital city reopen
Before summer ends, let's squeeze in one last trip to 'Our Pool'
Trader Joe's keeps issuing recalls. Rocks, insects, metal in our food. Is it time to worry?
Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
Federal judge blocks Texas law requiring I.D. to enter pornography websites
Penn Badgley Reunites With Gossip Girl Sister Taylor Momsen
A Russian spacecraft crashed on the moon last month. NASA says it's discovered where.