
Shares edge up in Asia, US inflation data looms large
Trade and geopolitics also loom large with a U.S. tariff deadline on China due to expire on Tuesday amid expectations it will get extended again, while President Donald Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin are due to meet in Alaska on Friday to discuss Ukraine.
The main economic release will be U.S. consumer prices on Tuesday, with analysts expecting the impact of tariffs to help nudge the core up 0.3% to an annual pace of 3.0% and away from the Federal Reserve target of 2%.
An upside surprise would challenge market wagers for a September rate cut, though analysts assume it would have to be a very high number given a downward turn in payrolls is now dominating the outlook.
"The tone from the Fed has shifted as a number of officials expressed concerns about growth following the July employment report," said Bruce Kasman, chief economist at JPMorgan.
"We now expect the Fed to restart its easing cycle in September," he added. "Recession risks are elevated at 40%, but we do not yet see a case for a larger than 25bp series of cuts."
Markets imply around a 90% probability of a September easing, and at least one more cut by year end.
Trump's pick for Fed governor, Stephen Miran, may or may not be in place in time to vote for a cut in September, while the choice of a new chair has broadened out to around 10 contenders.
The prospect of lower borrowing costs has supported equities, along with a run of strong earnings.
Analysts at BofA note 73% of companies had beaten on earnings, well above the 59% long run average, while 78% beat on revenue. "While mentions of 'weak demand' ticked up and tariff concerns remain, corporate sentiment and guidance are improving," they said in a note.
S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures both edged up 0.1% to near record highs.
Analysts were unsure what to make of a report in the Financial Times that tech majors Nvidia (NVDA.O), opens new tab and AMD (AMD.O), opens new tab have agreed to give the U.S. government 15% of their revenues from chip sales in China, under an arrangement to obtain export licenses for the semiconductors.
Japan's stock market (.N225), opens new tab was closed for a holiday, but futures stood at 42,290 and well above the cash close of 41,820, suggesting the index could test its all-time high of 42,426 this week.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan (.MIAPJ0000PUS), opens new tab was a fraction firmer, while South Korea (.KS11), opens new tab was flat having bounced 2.9% last week.
EUROSTOXX 50 futures added 0.2%, while FTSE futures were flat and DAX futures firmed 0.3%.
Currencies were quiet with markets thinned by Japan's absence, with the dollar index steady at 98.246 after slipping 0.4% last week.
The euro was flat at $1.1644 and comfortably above its recent trough of $1.1392, while the dollar held at 147.66 yen having met resistance around 147.90.
The Australian dollar eased to $0.6516 ahead of a meeting of the Reserve Bank of Australia which is widely expected to sanction a rate cut, having stunned markets in July by skipping an easing to await more inflation data.
The figures turned out benign, so investors have again fully priced a quarter-point cut to 3.60%.
In commodity markets, gold dipped 0.3% to $3,386 an ounce after wild swings last week on reports the U.S. would slap 39% tariffs on some gold bars, which are major exports of Switzerland.
Gold futures pared gains on Friday when the White House said it planned plans to issue an executive order clarifying the country's stance on gold bar tariffs.
Oil prices slipped amid risks the talks between Trump and Putin could make progress to a ceasefire in Ukraine and possibly an eventual easing of sanctions on Russian oil exports.
Brent dropped 0.6% to $66.22 a barrel, while U.S. crude eased 0.7% to $63.44 per barrel.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
3 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Keir Starmer to host Volodymyr Zelenskyy at Downing Street
Update: Date: 2025-08-14T07:51:11.000Z Title: Keir Starmer to meet Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Downing Street Content: Keir Starmer will be joined by the Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy at Downing Street on Thursday morning, as Europe braces for the outcome of Donald Trump's face-to-face discussions with his Russian counterpart later this week. The prime minister's meeting with Zelenskyy comes after he said Britain stood ready to 'increase pressure' on Russia if necessary. Meanwhile, Trump threatened Russia with 'severe consequences' if a ceasefire was rejected by its leader. During a call with the US president and European allies on Wednesday, Starmer praised Trump for his work to bring forward a 'viable' chance of an end to the war. Concerns have been raised over Zelenskyy's exclusion from the meeting between Trump and Putin, which is scheduled to take place in Alaska. Speaking on Wednesday, Starmer said: This meeting on Friday that President Trump is attending is hugely important. As I've said personally to President Trump for the three-and-a-bit years this conflict has been going on, we haven't got anywhere near a prospect of actually a viable solution, a viable way of bringing it to a ceasefire. And now we do have that chance because of the work of that the president has put in. Starmer is scheduled to meet Zelenskyy at 9.30am. Also today, education secretary Bridget Phillipson has been on the morning media rounds as students in England, Wales and Northern Ireland received their A-level exam results. Phillipson is also expected to visit Trafford College in Altrincham, Greater Manchester. The shadow secretary of state for business and trade Andrew Griffith has been on the morning media rounds for the Conservatives. I'll bring you any lines from them in a moment. But first, in other developments: The UK economy grew at a faster rate than expected in the second quarter, official figures show, despite a slowdown from a strong start to the year amid pressure from tax increases and Donald Trump's global trade war. Figures from the Office for National Statistics showed growth in gross domestic product (GDP) slowed to 0.3% in the three months to the end of June, down from a rate of 0.7% in the first quarter. Rachel Reeves has promised to use her autumn budget to prioritise fixing Britain's dismal record on productivity as she sought to downplay mounting tax speculation with a focus on economic growth. Writing exclusively for the Guardian, she said: 'If Labour's first year in power was about fixing the foundations, then the second year is about building a stronger economy for a renewed Britain.' David Lammy has referred himself to the environment watchdog after going fishing with JD Vance without the required licence during the US vice-president's trip to the UK. The foreign secretary hosted Vance and his family at Chevening House in Kent last week, where the pair fished from the property's private lake. Anglers aged 13 and over must hold a rod licence to fish for freshwater species such as carp in England and Wales. The Scottish Greens have to broaden their appeal beyond middle-class urbanites by talking to voters in industrial towns facing wholesale job losses, a Green leadership candidate says. Gillian Mackay is one of four Scottish Greens bidding to win two co-leader posts after Patrick Harvie, the UK's longest-serving party leader, quit as co-convener earlier this year.


Reuters
3 minutes ago
- Reuters
India's FX reserves to rise for latest week despite RBI support, swap maturity, economists say
MUMBAI, Aug 14 (Reuters) - India's foreign exchange reserves are expected to have risen in the week through August 8, according to economists calculations based on the Reserve Bank of India's weekly reserve money release. A $5 billion dollar/rupee swap by the RBI matured that week, with bankers saying the central bank delivered the swap, a move that is a drain on reserves. Further, the RBI intervened in both the onshore spot and non-deliverable forward markets that week to prevent the rupee from slipping past its all-time low of 87.95 after U.S. President Donald Trump imposed additional tariffs on Indian goods over the country's purchase of Russian oil. This drain on reserves was balanced out by revaluation effects, economists said. "The rise in FX reserves was fuelled by a revaluation boost of $9.8 billion, reflecting higher gold prices and a weaker dollar," said Gaura Sen Gupta, economist at IDFC First Bank. She estimated that India's reserves rose by more than $4 billion during the week. The official figures will be released on Friday. When RBI sells dollar in the spot market to support the rupee it directly reduces FX reserves, while NDF interventions influence offshore sentiment without an immediate reserves impact. The net dollar selling by RBI in that week was $5.6 billion, which includes maturity of $5 billion swap, Sen Gupta said, which she noted implied spot intervention in the week was less and that the RBI would have relied on NDF.


Reuters
3 minutes ago
- Reuters
Foxconn sees robust AI demand continuing after Q2 profit tops forecast
TAIPEI, Aug 14 (Reuters) - Foxconn expects higher third-quarter revenue, it said on Thursday, on robust demand for artificial intelligence servers, which helped the world's largest contract electronics maker report a forecast-beating 27% increase in second-quarter profit. Foxconn ( opens new tab said it should see significant year-on-year revenue growth in the third quarter, with AI server revenue expected to leap more than 170% year-on-year. Nvidia's (NVDA.O), opens new tab biggest server maker and Apple's (AAPL.O), opens new tab top iPhone assembler has been riding a data centre boom, as cloud computing firms such as Amazon (AMZN.O), opens new tab, Microsoft (MSFT.O), opens new tab and Alphabet's (GOOGL.O), opens new tab Google spend billions of dollars to expand their AI infrastructure and research capacity. That boom helped Foxconn's revenue from its cloud and networking business, which includes AI servers, exceed that from smart consumer electronics - such as iPhones - for the first time ever in the second quarter. Yet, global trade uncertainty could dim the prospects for its outlook this year, as it has a major manufacturing presence in China, though Washington and Beijing this week extended a tariff truce for another 90 days. Most of the iPhones Foxconn makes for Apple are assembled in China, but the bulk of those sold in the United States are now produced in India. The company is also building factories in Mexico and Texas to make AI servers for Nvidia. Foxconn has also been looking to expand its footprint in electric vehicles, which the company sees as a major future growth generator, though that has not always gone smoothly. Earlier this month, Foxconn said it had struck a deal to sell a former car factory at Lordstown, Ohio, for $375 million, including its machinery, that it purchased in 2022 to manufacture EVs. However, it will continue to occupy the facility. The company said in its earnings call with analysts and media on Thursday the Ohio plant would be used to manufacture cloud-related products. Foxconn has also expanded beyond its traditional role as an iPhone assembler into other areas too. Last month it formed a strategic partnership with industrial motor maker TECO Electric & Machinery ( opens new tab to build data centres. Net profit for the April-June period was T$44.4 billion ($1.48 billion), higher than the consensus estimate of T$38.8 billion compiled by LSEG, the company said. Foxconn, formally called Hon Hai Precision Industry, last month reported record second-quarter revenue on strong demand for AI products but cautioned about geopolitical and exchange rate headwinds. For its full-year revenue, it forecast significant year-on-year growth, in line with previous guidance given in May. It did not elaborate and the company does not provide numerical guidance. Foxconn's shares have risen 8.4% so far this year, outperforming the broader Taiwan index's (.TWII), opens new tab 5.2% gain. Its shares closed up 0.5% on Thursday ahead of the earnings release. ($1 = 29.9600 Taiwan dollars)