US equity futures have reversed all overnight losses which were driven by the latest crash in South Korean stocks, which plunged 8% and closed at LOD, driven by a plunge in memory stocks. Still, the Nasdaq is still lower with tech stocks depressed on news that Sam Altman's OpenAI is seeking to offer a 5% stake to Trump in what is clearly an attempt to incentivize the government to backstop the company whose revenues are clearly below budget. As of 8:00am ET, S&P futures are up 0.1%, while Nasdaq futures drop 0.2% after semiconductors and high beta momentum led Wall Street lower in the previous session; the latest bout of tech volatility entered a second day, with chipmakers in South Korea bearing the brunt of the selling. SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics lost a combined $290 billion in value to drive a 7.9% slump in South Korea’s Kospi index. In Europe, the Stoxx 600 rose 0.6%, with technology among only two of the 20 index sectors to lose ground. Elsewhere, the dollar fell, as USDJPY suffered a sudden plunge on intervention concerns, and US 10-year yields +2bps at 4.50%, WTI -1.49% @ $67.55. All eyes on NFP later this AM (consensus at +113k, see our preview) and subsequent Fed pricing (market currently pricing in ~30% chance of a hike at July meeting) following yesterday’s Momentum drawdown (High Beta Momo finished -9.62%, second worst day YTD, top 5 worst days over last 5 years). So far the spillover from overnight price action has been limited, with KOSPI -7.89%, NKY -2.5% as yesterday’s META headlines continue to drive anxiety around overcapacity fears.
In premarket trading, Mag 7 stocks are mixe: ( Microsoft +0.7%, Apple +0.4%, Tesla +0.5%, Amazon +0.6%, Meta +0.3%, Alphabet -0.6%, Nvidia -0.5%)
The frequent swings in the market’s biggest drivers come as traders react to any sign that a near-parabolic rally in chipmakers, the biggest beneficiaries of the vast outlays on AI infrastructure, has run too far (spoiler alert: it has). In the latest instance, Meta’s plan to sell computing power raised questions about a glut of capacity. The Kospi, the poster child retail-driven momentum chasing idiocy and the AI trade, fell 7.9% after memory heavyweights Samsung and SK Hynix were rattled by news that Apple is in talks to buy chips from two Chinese semiconductor makers on a Pentagon blacklist to help reduce the impact of a global memory shortage.
Meanwhile, investors are rotating into laggards that stand to benefit from a strengthening economic outlook just as money-market bets on tighter monetary policy recede. Consumer-orientated stocks led gains in Europe on Thursday, tracking Wednesday’s US moves when a majority of S&P 500 stocks advanced. By contrast, memory, storage and processing names were again among the biggest decliners in US premarket trading. Sandisk, Seagate and Dell were all down 3% or more.
“The market recognizes the risks associated with a potential overvaluation in the tech sector,” said Guillermo Hernández Sampere, head of trading at MPPM. “Whether a major shift away from the tech sector is underway will become apparent by the next round of quarterly earnings reports.”
Investors will also focus on the US jobs report at the end of a holiday-shortened week. The data will offer fresh clues on the path for interest rates after comments Wednesday by Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh dampened speculation of a hike this year.
For jobs report at 8:30am New York time, Bloomberg’s crowd-sourced whisper number for nonfarm payrolls change is 138k vs median economist estimate of 113k; unemployment rate is expected to remain at 4.3%.Bloomberg Economics anticipates a hot payrolls report will show the US economy added 200,000 jobs in June. That would be a third straight extremely strong print, with the three-month average job increase likely clocking in at 183,000.
“A strong payrolls report — particularly if we see healthy gains in hourly wages — would likely increase market bets on rate hikes this year,” according to Bloomberg Economics’ Anna Wong.
Our full preview is here; in its preview Goldman estimates nonfarm payrolls rose by 130k in June, above consensus of +115k. On the positive side, the bank estimates that the World Cup could boost payroll growth by 40k in June. Additionally, June payrolls have exhibited a consistent positive bias in initial prints over the last decade which has been particularly pronounced in state and local government education services payrolls. On the negative side, GS expects a 10k decline in government payrolls outside of state and local government educational services.
The options market is pricing in a roughly 0.5% move for the S&P 500 in response to NFPs, according to Bloomberg calculations, broadly in line with last month’s muted expectations despite the June release triggering a 2.6% selloff.
European stocks rose as investors looked for alternatives to expensive tech shares in more defensive sectors. Technology significantly underperforms, while personal care, food and beverage stocks outperform. The Stoxx 600 index rises 0.5% to 642.64 with 422 members up, 167 down and 11 unchanged. Here are the biggest movers Thursday:
Asian stocks headed for the lowest close in three weeks as concerns over excess AI capacity and intensifying competition sparked a selloff in high-flying chip shares. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index slid 1.4%, with South Korea’s Kospi tumbling almost 8% to lead regional declines. Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix lost at least 9% each to be the biggest drags on the regional benchmark, while TSMC and Japan’s Kioxia also slumped. The moves followed losses in US semiconductor shares that saw Micron Technology and Sandisk plunge more than 10%. The selloff came as Meta Platforms’s reported plans to build a cloud infrastructure business that would sell access to AI computing power and models fueled concern the company may have overbuilt its capacity. Separately, Apple is in talks to buy chips from two Chinese semiconductor makers, according to people familiar with the matter, which would hurt South Korean manufacturers. The iPhone maker late last month raised prices of all Macs, iPads, home devices and the Vision Pro, stoking concern that rising costs may start to curb demand and spurring a broad rout in global tech shares at the time. Equities in India and Southeast Asia bucked the regional selloff while stocks in Hong Kong also rose on return from a public holiday.
In FX, USD/JPY has been on the move with the pair down around 130 pips. The move was set in motion by comments from South Korea that is was closely communicating with the US and Japan on FX intervention, before experiencing a much steeper decline. Reporting via Reuters notes that Japan could shift to surprise Yen intervention tactics. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index is down 0.3%, enabling EUR/USD to return to a 1.14 handle.
In rates, treasuries are under slight pressure ahead of the release of June employment data with potential to alter the outlook for a Fed rate hike at the end of the month. US long-end yields are 1bp-2bp cheaper with front-end tenors little changed, steepening 2s10s spread by 2bp. 10-year is near 4.49%, 1.4bp higher on the day, with bunds and gilts in the sector lagging by 3bp and 4bp. About 8bp of Fed tightening is priced in for the July 29 policy decision, 35bp by the end of the year. European benchmarks are being sold to a greater extent with 10 year yields in Germany and the UK up 4 basis points each. With US markets closed Friday, jobs report is being released a day earlier than normal, and Sifma recommended 2pm close for cash trading.
In commodities, WTI crude is lower for a third consecutive day, back below $68 a barrel, as flows through the Strait of Hormuz improve and there are signs of progress in indirect talks between the US and Iran. Precious metals are building on yesterday’s gains with spot gold and silver up 1% and 1.4% respectively. Bitcoin adds 0.7%.
Today's US economic data calendar also include weekly jobless claims (8:30am) and May factory orders with durable goods orders revision (10am), Fed speaker slate includes Daly at 7:45am in moderated discussion at a Banco de España conference.
Market Snapshot
Top Overnight News
A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk
APAC stocks were mixed but with the major indices predominantly in the red following the tech-related losses on Wall St, while participants also brace for the incoming Non-Farm Payrolls report in a holiday-shortened trading week stateside. ASX 200 was rangebound as strength in the top-weighted financial sector was offset by losses in the utilities, tech, energy and consumer sectors, while sentiment was also not helped by weak Australian trade data. Nikkei 225 retreated at the open amid tech selling and recent upside in yields, although the index then staged a partial rebound, before selling resumed later in the session. KOSPI slumped amid the pressure in memory chip stocks, and triggered a sidecar in early trade. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp traded mixed with the mainland conforming to the broad risk-off mood, while the Hong Kong benchmark bucked the trend amid strength in local tech, biopharmaceutical and auto names on return from the holiday closure.
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European bourses (STOXX 600 +0.5%) initially started Thursday's trade on a softer footing but have climbed off their lows, with all indices in the green, outside of the AEX (-0.3%). Sentiment overnight was on the softer side, following another tech selloff in South Korean stocks (Samsung -9.1%, SK Hynix -14.6%) after Meta plans to sell excess AI compute to build a cloud business, raising questions over excess in AI capacity. However, with Europe lacking the big AI giants, this seems to support the Euro area. European sectors point to a positive bias. Optimised Personal Care (+2.1%) tops the sector pile, followed by Food, Beverages & Tobacco (+2.0%) and Health Care (+1.5%). As expected, Technology (-1.9%) is the clear sector laggard and the only sector in the red.
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Fixed Income
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Geopolitics: Iran
Geopolitics: Ukraine
Geopolitics: Other
US Event Calendar
DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap
Markets have had a rocky start so far to Q3, with global bonds and equities losing ground over the last 24 hours. The main culprit has been another slide in chip stocks, with the Philly semiconductor index down -6.27%. And those losses have continued overnight, with South Korea’s KOSPI down -5.06% this morning. Moreover, an underwhelming batch of US data hasn’t helped matters, with the S&P 500 (-0.22%) and the STOXX 600 (-0.38%) both pulling back as well yesterday.
Yet despite those negative headlines, the performance actually hasn’t been so bad if you look beyond the tech slump. Indeed, the equal-weighted S&P 500 (+0.24%) hit a new record as markets dialled back the chance of an imminent Fed rate hike. In addition, positive geopolitical headlines pushed Brent crude oil (-1.85%) to a 4-month low of $71.57/bbl, and this morning that’s continued, with Brent down another -1.06% to $70.81/bbl. So even as the headline numbers pointed towards fresh losses, there was still a fair amount of optimism among investors.
Those glimmers of positivity have been reflected overnight, where both US and European equity futures have stabilised. For instance, futures on the S&P 500 (+0.09%) and the DAX (+0.27%) are both in positive territory. And even though many indices in Asia have lost ground this morning, they’ve recovered from their lows earlier in the session. Indeed, the Nikkei is down -1.61%, but it had been down -2.55% in the first hour of trading. Similarly, the CSI 300 is down -1.85%, but had been down -2.45% earlier on. And several indices are still higher, including the Hang Seng (+1.19%), and Japan’s TOPIX index (+0.63%).
One of those positive catalysts was headlines from Fed Chair Warsh yesterday, who spoke at the ECB’s Sintra forum. He declined to offer any forward guidance, but markets latched onto his comment that “inflation risks have come down”, even as he reiterated his commitment to price stability. So that meant investors priced out the chance of a July hike, with the futures-implied probability falling from 34% on Tuesday to just 27% by the close. And looking further out, the number of hikes priced by December fell -1.4bps on the day to just 36bps.
That dovish repricing then got further momentum from the latest batch of US data, which was generally a bit softer than expected. For instance, the ADP’s report of private payrolls came in at 98k in June (vs. 120k expected). And shortly after, the ISM manufacturing fell to 53.3 in June (vs. 53.9 expected), with the prices paid component down to a 4-month low of 73.0. So collectively that pushed back against the hawkish narrative and led markets to price out the July hike. Nevertheless, longer-dated Treasury yields still inched higher, with the 10yr yield (+1.4bps) up to 4.48%.
Looking forward, US data will stay in the spotlight today, as the June jobs report is out at 13:30 London time. As a reminder, the last three jobs reports all surprised on the upside, pushing the 3-month average of payrolls to a two-year high of +188k. So that’s been a crucial factor behind the hawkish repricing in recent weeks. For today, our US economists forecast payrolls to come in at +75k, largely reflecting expected payback from strong government and leisure/hospitality hiring last month. Meanwhile, they think the unemployment rate will stay at 4.3%, where it’s been for the last 3 consecutive months.
Over in the Euro Area, yesterday also brought some dovish headlines after the flash CPI print surprised on the downside. It showed headline CPI falling more than expected to +2.8% in June (vs. +3.0% expected), with core CPI also down to +2.4% (vs. +2.5% expected). So that led markets to price in a more dovish path for the ECB over the months ahead, with just 19bps of rate hikes priced in by the December meeting at the close, down -4.3bps on the day. And overnight that’s continued, with just 18bps of hikes now priced in this year. Indeed, with fewer than 25bps now priced by the December meeting, it means investors are pricing in around a one-in-four chance that the ECB might not hike at all again this year.
In the meantime, ECB President Lagarde also spoke on the same panel as Warsh, although her comments didn’t obviously push markets in either direction. She said that the upside inflation and downside growth risks “are probably more broadly balanced than they were a few weeks ago”. But there wasn’t anything that dominated the headlines. So front-end yields fell back in line with the dovish repricing, with the 2yr German yield down -1.6bps. But as in the US, there was a bigger push higher at the long end of the curve, with yields on 10yr bunds (+2.0bps), OATs (+2.9bps) and BTPs (+3.3bps) all rising.
As all that was happening, the dovish momentum got further support from the latest decline in oil prices, with Brent crude (-1.85%) falling to a 4-month low of $71.57/bbl. That followed positive headlines on the US-Iran talks, after Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff were in Qatar on Tuesday. For instance, Trump said that “They’ve had very good meetings”, and AFP reported yesterday that US and Iranian officials were holding indirect lower-level technical talks with mediators. Ongoing talks were then later confirmed by Vice President Vance, who said that the “negotiators are sitting down with the Iranians, with the Qataris, and with others in Doha, talking about some of the details here”. So the newsflow helped to bring oil prices down and ease investor concern about inflation.
When it came to equities, the dovish momentum was countered by a fresh selloff in chip stocks, which saw the Philly semiconductor index fall -6.27%. So that dragged down US equities more broadly, with the S&P 500 (-0.22%) pulling back after gains on Monday and Tuesday. Nevertheless, there were still broader gains, and the equal-weighted S&P 500 (+0.24%) hit a new record. Moreover, there was a big jump for Meta (+8.81%), which was the third-strongest performer in the S&P 500 yesterday, after Bloomberg reported they were developing plans for a cloud infrastructure business. However, European equities struggled in the meantime, with the STOXX 600 (-0.38%) pulling back as well.
In other news, the US has said they won’t renew the USMCA trade deal but will instead conduct annual reviews. The original deal said that the countries could unanimously agree on a 16-year extension, but US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said they were “not prepared to rubber stamp the agreement”, and that “there are substantial issues.” The deal is still in place for another decade if no one leaves, but this now begins a 10-year countdown to expiry in 2036 if an agreement isn’t reached.
Looking at the day ahead, data releases include the US jobs report for June, the weekly initial jobless claims, factory orders for May, and the Euro Area unemployment rate for May. Otherwise from central banks, we’ll hear from the Fed’s Daly, the ECB’s Escriva and Cipollone, and the BoE’s Mann.


