logo
Global markets steady as trade talks between US and China continue

Global markets steady as trade talks between US and China continue

Irish Timesa day ago

Global stocks held steady on Tuesday as trade talks between the United States and China continued into a second day, giving investors some reason to believe tensions between the world's two largest economies may be easing.
Dublin
Euronext Dublin outperformed its international as it finished the day up 0.6 per cent, boosted by homebuilders.
One of the best performers was Kingspan, which was up 2.4 per cent at close of business on what was described by a trader as a 'strong day' for the Cavan-based insulation specialist.
Homebuilders Glenveagh Properties and Cairn Homes finished up 1.9 per cent and 0.5 per cent respectively after the sector was boosted by a positive trading update from UK-based peer Bellway.
READ MORE
Other highlights included food giant Kerry Group, which finished up 1.8 per cent, and healthcare group Uniphar, which climbed 2.7 per cent.
There was some weakness among the financial names, with Bank of Ireland and AIB down 1.7 per cent and 1.2 per cent respectively.
Elsehwere, hotels group Dalata finished up 1.2 per cent. 'There was an Irish Times article in the morning talking about how the company turned down a bid last week from the Pandox consortium, and the stock did feel reasonably strong throughout the day,' a trader said.
Meanwhile, budget airline Ryanair held on to its recent gains, up 1 per cent on the day, outperforming most of its peers.
London
The blue-chip FTSE 100 closed 0.2 per cent higher to move within touching distance of its all-time high.
The home construction and household goods sector led the gains, up 5.4 per cent. It was driven by a 7.9 per cent rise in Bellway after the homebuilder raised its forecast for the numbers of homes it expects to build this year.
Rivals Vistry and Persimmon were up 9.4 per cent and 6 per cent, respectively.
Energy shares climbed 3.5 per cent, tracking higher oil prices. Precious metal miners, however, posted heavy declines, down 4.8 per cent.
Hochschild Mining plunged almost 23 per cent after issuing a six-week shutdown at its Mara Rosa mine, following lower-than-expected gold output by the end of May.
Mid-caps in London were up 0.5 per cent, largely boosted by a 6.3 per cent rise in Aberdeen after JP Morgan upgraded the fund manager's stock to 'overweight' from 'neutral'.
Europe
On the continent, the Stoxx 600 was little changed, constrained by UBS, whose shares dropped nearly 5 per cent as investors worried about the impact of new government proposals to force the Swiss bank to hold $26 billion (€22.8 billion) in extra capital.
Elsewhere, the Dax in Germany finished the day down 0.8 per cent, while the Cac in Paris finished up 0.2 per cent.
Euro zone government bond yields fell but hovered not far from the previous day's levels. Germany's 10-year yield, the benchmark for the euro zone, was down 4 basis points at 2.53 per cent.
New York
Wall Street's main indexes were subdued in volatile trading as investors awaited a breakthrough in the ongoing US-China trade talks aimed at defusing a tariff dispute that has rocked global markets this year.
At midday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.02 per cent; the S&P 500 gained 0.1 per cent; and the Nasdaq Composite 0.04 per cent.
Seven of the 11 major S&P 500 subsectors rose, led by a 1.9 per cent gain in energy, tracking strength in oil prices. Communication services stocks added 0.8 per cent. Most megacap and growth stocks were mixed. Tesla shares advanced 3.6 per cent.
Insmed shares jumped 27 per cent after the drugmaker said its experimental drug significantly reduced blood pressure in the lungs and improved exercise capacity in patients in a mid-stage study.
Jif peanut butter maker JM Smucker's shares were set for their worst day on record after it forecast annual profit below estimates. The company's shares were last down 12.3 per cent. – Additional reporting: Agencies

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

In pictures: Six-bedroom country lodge amid enchanting woodland in Co Wicklow for €1.995m
In pictures: Six-bedroom country lodge amid enchanting woodland in Co Wicklow for €1.995m

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

In pictures: Six-bedroom country lodge amid enchanting woodland in Co Wicklow for €1.995m

Address : Ballyteige Lodge, Ballyteige, Tinahely, Arklow, Co Wicklow Price : €1,995,000 Agent : Sherry FitzGerald Country Homes View this property on Renowned surgeon John McArdle built Ballyteige Lodge in 1890 as his shooting lodge, a country retreat from his home in Merrion Square in Dublin . An avowed nationalist, McArdle would host such political figures as John Redmond and Charles Stewart Parnell at the lodge – one can only imagine what conversations must have taken place during those hunting parties. The good news for prospective buyers of Ballyteige Lodge is that they'll still have shooting rights on a half-acre area on Ballyteige Mountain just behind the lodge. They'll also have fishing rights on the scenic Ow river which runs through the magnificent grounds. There's more good news with the knowledge that Ballyteige Lodge has been beautifully maintained by McArdle's descendant Seán McArdle, retaining its charming period features and tastefully incorporating contemporary touches. Situated on the Wicklow Way, the lodge is a well-known visitor attraction in the area, offering accommodation and fine dining, and its sylvan setting by the river makes it popular for weddings and other events, including craft and horticulture workshops and guided tours of the gardens and grounds. A suspension bridge over the river leads into a lush forest path and on to a spectacular waterfall, providing excellent wedding photo opportunities. The property will be sold freehold, with vacant possession given at the close of the sale, but the tourism income opportunities of this fine, elegant portal to a different age are apparent. READ MORE Ballyteige Lodge Porch Hall Drawingroom Drawingroom Sittingroom Ballyteige Lodge Ballyteige Lodge is on an elevated site surrounded by gorgeously landscaped gardens and enchanting grounds, which include a tennis lawn, mature orchard, flower gardens, a Japanese water garden, two swimming areas and restored stables which are used for private events and celebrations. The flower gardens are testimony to more than a century of expert horticultural design, with vibrant herbaceous borders and a rose garden surrounded by mature beech hedging. The tennis lawn is sheltered by ancient trees, and there's a circular outdoor swimming pool in a natural forest setting, and a wild but safe swimming area in the river. As you walk through the mature woodlands, you'll spot sequoias, Irish oak, beech, copper beech, monkey puzzle trees, Scots pine and Irish champion Lawson cypress. Inside, the lodge has high ceilings, original timber floors and large sash windows, with an elegant drawingroom, cosy sittingroom, grand diningroom, sun-drenched conservatory and a kitchen designed for entertaining. The kitchen contains bespoke cabinetry, an Aga and a large central island, and is adjoined by generous pantry and utility room, plus an additional workshop area to the rear. The drawingroom has intricate cornicing and a large cast-iron period fireplace, while the diningroom is big enough to host a banquet. Off the sittingroom, the gorgeous conservatory opens out to an ornate Victorian pergola bedecked in seasonal plants and blooms. It's the ideal space for dining almost al fresco, with views of the gardens sweeping away to the mountains and forests. A wide staircase leads to six well-proportioned bedrooms upstairs, including four large doubles with dual aspect, high ceilings and original working fireplaces, and three bathrooms, two of which are fitted with original free-standing Victorian baths. The wide upstairs landing leads to a balcony to the front of the house which gives panoramic views over the gardens and the scenic Wicklow countryside beyond. Kitchen Diningroom Conservatory Waterfall Suspension bridge over Ow river Ow river The entire area around Ballyteige Lodge is woodland and is ideal for lovers of the outdoors with abundant walking and cycling trails, forests, lakes and mountains to explore, and a range of biodiversity to observe. There are also pubs, restaurants and other amenities in surrounding villages including Tinahely, Aughrim, Rathdrum and Laragh, and golf courses at Woodenbridge and Macreddin. There is access to primary and secondary schools in the area, and it's just an hour in to Dublin city centre and just over an hour to Dublin Airport. Back at the turn of the 20th century, Ballyteige Lodge would have been considered akin to what we call a 'smart house' today; it had its own hydroelectric system supplying it all the newfangled electricity it needed. Such a hydroelectric system would be viable today, according to a number of surveys, and could be supported by renewable energy grants. There is also scope to convert the large attic space to create two more bedrooms or a home office; and there's a former gardener's house, the Old Bothy, which could easily be renovated – both projects would be subject to planning permission. Ballyteige Lodge measures 422.6sq m (4,549sq ft) and has an E1 Ber. It is for sale through Sherry FitzGerald Country Homes seeking €1.995 million.

Chinese diplomats and Barbados ambassadors: Who have Irish MEPs been meeting?
Chinese diplomats and Barbados ambassadors: Who have Irish MEPs been meeting?

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

Chinese diplomats and Barbados ambassadors: Who have Irish MEPs been meeting?

The main cafe in the European Parliament in Brussels is a good politician-watching spot for journalists, lobbyists, and, likely, the occasional foreign spy. There is a steady flow of MEPs walking towards the parliament chamber nearby, or to some meeting. Advisers and other staff also regularly pass through, turning the row of tables and chairs into a wind tunnel of political gossip. For the price of a coffee, you can usually pick up a fair bit of information if you hang around chatting. I've yet to happen across one of the 14 Irish MEPs sitting down with any interesting characters here. That said, members of the European Parliament are required to publish a log of all the lobbyists, interest groups and other representatives they meet, so I don't have to camp out by the parliament cafe to see who has caught their ear. The ambassador of Barbados, Nicolla Simone Rudder, discussed relations between the Caribbean island and the EU with Fine Gael MEP Sean Kelly in Brussels last month Irish MEPs found time to chat to Chinese diplomats, associations of football supporters, tech and pharmaceutical lobbyists, and politicians from the disputed territory of Western Sahara, logs show. READ MORE The ambassador of Barbados, Nicolla Simone Rudder, discussed relations between the Caribbean island and the EU with long-time Fine Gael MEP Sean Kelly in Brussels last month. They mainly spoke about an EU law combating money laundering, said a spokesman for Kelly. Kelly had sit-downs with Facebook-owner Meta and the Irish Farmers' Association (IFA) , entries you might expect to see in any Irish MEPs' diary. The IFA and other farming lobby groups appeared regularly in the meeting logs of most Irish representatives. Perhaps more unusual was a meeting Kelly had with the British and Irish Association of Zoos and Aquariums to talk about animal protection laws. Fine Gael's Regina Doherty met representatives from Twitter, Intel, banking firm JPMorgan Chase and payment app Revolut Many of Fianna Fáil MEP Barry Andrews's meetings related to his role as head of the European Parliament's development committee. Logs show he met Irish aid charity association Dóchas, the World Bank, Oxfam, the Belgian development agency and Spanish foreign minister José Manuel Albares, among others. Fine Gael's Regina Doherty met representatives from Twitter, Intel, banking firm JPMorgan Chase and payment app Revolut, logs of her meetings show. Records show the European Football Supporters Association spoke to Sinn Féin MEP Lynn Boylan to drum up support for its campaign to require stadiums to provide free drinking water during matches. Representatives of indigenous communities in Colombia, and politicians from Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic, who claim sovereignty over the disputed territory of Western Sahara, also raised their cause with Boylan. Records show Fianna Fáil MEP Barry Cowen met Chinese diplomat Wang Jin, who oversees parliamentary affairs, to talk about trade last December The Dublin MEP had a large number of meetings focusing on Israel's war in Gaza, including with the Palestine Red Crescent Society, Unicef and the UN agency for Palestinian refugees Unrwa. The diary of Independent Ireland MEP Ciaran Mullooly had a more local hue. The former broadcaster reported meeting organisations representing Irish fish producers and forestry owners, a Co Offaly group opposing a wind farm in Lemanaghan, Edenderry GAA club, a local development association from Kilcormac, Co Offaly, and officials in Roscommon County Council. Mullooly did log a meeting he had with Brussels-based diplomats from the Chinese government last year, to discuss dairy tariffs. Records show Fianna Fáil MEP Barry Cowen met Chinese diplomat Wang Jin, who oversees parliamentary affairs, to talk about trade last December. Cowen, who sits on the agriculture committee, said he was 'always open' to growing new markets for Irish farmers. 'From past experience, I've always found Chinese officials to be pragmatic and focused when it comes to trade and co-operation,' he said. The Irish Thoroughbred Breeders' Association, European Horse Network, and Horse Sport Ireland were among those hosted by Fine Gael MEP Nina Carberry, a former jockey and thoroughbred breeder. The pharmaceutical industry has been very active in the parliament, opposing EU reforms that would attach more conditions to the length of time companies can exclusively sell new medicines they develop, without competition from generic drugmakers. Fianna Fáil MEP Billy Kelleher was a regular port of call for pharma lobbyists, records show. Kelleher, whose electoral base in Cork hosts a lot of pharmaceutical firms, met representatives from Pfizer, Eli Lilly, MSD, Novo Nordisk, Johnson & Johnson and others. Fine Gael's Maria Walsh spoke about cyberbullying and online deepfake videos with TikTok and covered some of the same ground with Snapchat, logs show. Google, Amazon, chip giant Nvidia, and ChatGPT developers OpenAI, all met Independent MEP Michael McNamara from Ireland South As co-chairman of a parliament working group on artificial intelligence (AI) regulation, lots of tech companies have been knocking on Michael McNamara's door. Google, Amazon, chip giant Nvidia, and ChatGPT developers OpenAI, all met the Independent MEP from Ireland South. McNamara also reported meeting the ambassador of Kyrgyzstan to discuss the Central Asian country's trade with the EU. The former Clare TD said he had an interest in the region due to human rights and democratisation work he was involved in 20 years ago, when he was with the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe. The only Irish MEP who had not published details of their meetings was Labour's Aodhán Ó Ríordáin. A spokesman said the omission was an administrative oversight that would soon be corrected.

One in five Irish consumers seeking a house to rent or buy
One in five Irish consumers seeking a house to rent or buy

Irish Times

time5 hours ago

  • Irish Times

One in five Irish consumers seeking a house to rent or buy

Almost one in five consumers in the Republic say they are looking to either rent or buy a property , the second highest rate in Europe, according to Banking and Payments Federation Ireland (BPFI). In its latest housing market monitor, the banking lobby group mined data from the European Central Bank 's (ECB) consumer expectations survey for February, showing a high level of latent or unmet demand for housing in the Irish market. The BPFI said demand for housing continues to rise, with 17 per cent of consumers reporting that they were looking to rent or buy, the second highest rate in Europe after the Netherlands (20.9 per cent). Among those renting, more than a quarter (26.3 per cent) were looking for accommodation, while one in five of those with a mortgage were actively looking for new housing. READ MORE 'The strong demand for housing especially among first-time buyers [FTBs] is also evident in the fact that 17,144 applications were received by the Revenue Commissioners for Help to Buy in the first four months of this year, almost 5,000 more than in the same period of 2024,' said BPFI chief executive Brian Hayes. However, Mr Hayes noted that on the supply side, only one in 10 (10.5 per cent) owner occupiers said they were rather likely or very likely to sell. Will rent reform make building apartments viable? Listen | 40:12 'We expect to see housing demand continue, mainly driven by demographic trends and mortgage demand, especially by FTBs due to the more positive outlook on incomes, with gross average earnings now surpassing €1,000 per week for the first time since the CSO [Central Statistics Office] data series began in 20088,' said Mr Hayes. 'On the supply side, however, there is significant uncertainty in terms of housing output in the medium term.' In its report, the BPFI noted that while the State is experiencing employment and population growth, the supply of housing has fallen behind. It noted that almost 6,000 new dwellings were completed in the first quarter, 2 per cent up on the same period last year. In annualised terms, there were 30,356 housing completions in the 12 months ending in March 2025. The Government's Housing for All output target is for the construction of 41,000 new homes in 2025, but given that overall completions fell back to 30,000 last year, few analysts expect this target to be achieved. 'We know that Ireland's population increased by around 735,000 people between 2014 and 2024 while in the same period, employment increased by nearly 739,000,' said Mr Hayes. 'Meanwhile, housing completions in Ireland declined in 2024 for the first time since 2013, excluding the period between 2020 and 2021, when the pandemic affected activity significantly,' he said. The BPFI also highlighted a worrying drop-off in housing commencements, the strongest indicator of future supply. After a significant rise in commencements in 2004, to just over 69,000 units mainly due to waivers on development levy and water connections charges, the BPFI's report said commencement numbers for the first four months of 2025 are 'discouraging' at 3,945 units, around 40 per cent of the levels observed in 2023 and similar to levels seen in 2016. The BPFI also noted that 73,626 units were granted permission in 2023 and 2024 in total, 'which is not encouraging for future years' potential housing output'. Planning permissions declined by more than 21 per cent between 2023 and 2024, with permissions issued for apartments dropping by more than 38 per cent during the period. In terms of mortgage activity, the BPFI noted there were 9,190 mortgage drawdowns in the first quarter of 2025 valued at €2.8 billion, an increase of 10 per cent in volume terms.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store