Published on 13/05/2025 06:59 PM
The S&P 500 was little changed flat early Tuesday following a big rally, as investors digested a softer-than-expected inflation report.
The consumer price index, a broad measure of goods and services costs across the U.S. economy, increased 2.3% on an annualised basis in April. Economists polled by Dow Jones expected inflation to remain at a 2.4% rate last month on a year-over-year basis.
Excluding food and energy, so-called core inflation ran at a 2.8% annual rate, which matched consensus estimates and was also unchanged from the prior month.
Hinge Health said in a filing on Tuesday that it plans to raise up to $437 million in its upcoming initial public offering.
The digital physical therapy startup filed its initial prospectus in March, and it updated the document with an expected pricing range for its Class A common stock of $28.00 to $32.00 per share. Hinge said it plans to sell about 13.7 million shares in the offering.
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the European Union suffers from a “collective action problem” that’s hampering trade negotiations, downplaying the possibility of a quick agreement with the US’s largest trading relationship.
“I think the US and Europe may be a bit slower,” Bessent said when asked at a Saudi-US Investment Forum in Riyadh about progress on tariff talks.
“My personal belief is Europe may have a collective action problem; that the Italians want something that’s different than the French. But I’m sure at the end of the day, we will reach a satisfactory conclusion,” he continued.
US Treasuries gained after a closely watched inflation report came in below expectations, offering support for wagers on at least two Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts this year.
The advances on Tuesday pushed the policy-sensitive two-year yield lower by as much as six basis points to 3.95%, while the benchmark 10-year rate slid about three basis points to 4.44%.
Swaps traders, who sharply lowered their expectations for Fed rate reductions on Monday on easing US-China trade tensions, priced in about 55 basis points of easing for the year — implying at least two cuts, with the first fully priced in for September.
Stock futures rose and bond yields fell after US inflation rose at a slower-than-anticipated pace April, showing a modest pass-through from President Donald Trump’s tariffs implemented last month.
S&P 500 contracts added 0.2%. The yield on 10-year Treasuries declined three basis points to 4.44%. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index fell 0.2%.
Inflation was slightly lower than expected in April as President Donald Trump’s tariffs just began hitting the slowing US economy, according to a Labor Department report Tuesday.
The consumer price index, which measures the costs for a broad range of goods and services, rose 0.2% for the month, putting the 12-month inflation rate at 2.3%, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said. The monthly reading was in line with the Dow Jones consensus estimate and slightly below the annual forecast for 2.4%.
The Trump administration’s temporary trade deal with China didn’t arrive in time to prevent a slowdown in the US economy, forecasters say, even if it reduces the risk of a full-blown recession later this year.
Labour-market data could start to show the hit to employment by the end of May, they expect, while accelerating inflation should become evident in reports due next month.
That combination leaves the economy on track to grow significantly less this year than in 2024, even after accounting for Monday’s truce. While the current US levy on Chinese imports of 30% is well below the 145% duty put in place over the last month, it still represents a sharp increase from before President Donald Trump took office in January.
Robinhood Markets Inc. agreed to acquire WonderFi Technologies Inc., the operator of two Canadian cryptocurrency platforms, for about C$250 million ($179 million) in cash.
The fintech will purchase all of WonderFi’s issued and outstanding common shares for 36 Canadian cents apiece, 41% higher than the closing price on Monday, according to a statement Tuesday. WonderFi has more than C$2.1 billion in assets under custody.
WonderFi’s crypto offerings will help Robinhood bring Canadians greater access to crypto trading, the companies said in the statement. Menlo Park, California-based Robinhood, best known for its retail investing services, has been expanding globally, and said late last year that it was starting operations in Asia.
The Wall Street stocks rally headed for a pause as optimism around the temporary tariff cuts agreed between the US and China gave way to lingering concern about inflation and economic growth.
Futures pointed to a drop of 0.3% for the S&P 500 and a 0.2% decline for the Nasdaq 100. UnitedHealth Group Inc. sank 10% in premarket trading after suspending its 2025 outlook. Appetite for safer assets picked up again, with Treasury yields falling and gold prices on the rise. The dollar slipped.
Treasuries gained ahead of the release of US inflation data, paring sharp losses sparked by the temporary US-China trade truce that’s dimmed the odds of a global recession.
With market-implied expectations for Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts receding and a multi-trillion-dollar tax package seen likely to worsen the US government budget deficit, focus is now on Tuesday’s inflation data for any signs of a pickup in price pressures. The report will be the first to show tariff-related costs.
The yield on policy-sensitive two-year bonds fell nearly three basis points to 3.98% on Tuesday, outperforming European peers. The rate surged 12 basis points on Monday after the world’s biggest economies agreed to temporarily cut tariffs, dimming the odds of a recession and fueling a rally in risk assets.
BNP Paribas SA shareholders confirmed Chief Executive Officer Jean-Laurent Bonnafe for another three-year term as director, clearing the way for him to become one of Europe’s longest-serving bank CEOs.
Shareholders at the bank’s annual general meeting in Paris on Tuesday also voted to raise the age limit for the CEO role to 68 years, from 65 currently. The change was needed to allow the 63-year-old to stay on in his role until 2028.
At the helm of the lender for more than 13 years already, Bonnafe built up the trading business and propelled the asset management unit into the top ranks. Another chapter will give him the opportunity to overhaul of the sprawling French commercial and retail business and groom a successor.
Russia’s oil prices fell for a fifth week, leaving the value of the nation’s shipments close to a two-year low and largely negating the impact of a gain in crude sales.
Total flows in the four weeks to May 11 were worth about $4.09 billion, edging up from the period to May 4 but still the second-lowest since April 2023. Export prices for key grades shipped from the Baltic, Black Sea and Pacific regions all registered further declines.
UnitedHealth Group on Tuesday named board Chairman Stephen Hemsley as its new chief executive officer, replacing Andrew Witty.
The insurer also suspended its 2025 outlook, sending shares down 9% in premarket trading in New York. It said it expects to return to growth in 2026.
The CEO appointment is effective immediately, following Witty’s decision to step down as CEO for personal reasons, the company said in a statement. Hemsley will remain chairman.
Hemsley, 72, joined UnitedHealth as chief operating officer in 1997 and served as CEO from 2006 to 2017, when he became board chair. He pledged to return the company to its “long-term growth objective of 13 to 16%.”
The Trump administration is preparing to announce a deal granting Saudi Arabia more access to advanced semiconductors, paving the way for increased data center capacity in the Gulf nation despite concerns from some US officials about its ties to China, according to people familiar with the matter.
SoftBank’s Vision Fund investment arm posted a loss for the financial year ended March, with investment gains down 40% from the previous year. Despite this, SoftBank Group reported a full-year profit driven by gains in long-standing holdings and contributions from Arm and its domestic telecommunications business. The group remains committed to its AI ambitions, including investments in OpenAI and the Stargate AI infrastructure initiative. Read here
Industrial metals including copper were broadly steady, as traders weighed the impact of the US-China trade truce against ongoing concerns about inflation and economic growth.
Copper edged up slightly in London, after climbing near the highest since early April on Monday. Tariff cuts announced that day between the world’s two largest economies brought some relief to commodity markets, which had been hit by the trade war that dented the outlook for global economic growth.
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the trade deal from President Donald Trump’s first tariff war with China gives the nations “a very good framework” for upcoming discussions after the temporary lifting of levies between them. He reiterated that the US doesn’t want “generalized” decoupling from China.
The Trump administration is preparing to announce a deal granting Saudi Arabia more access to advanced semiconductors, paving the way for increased data center capacity in the Gulf nation despite concerns from some US officials about its ties to China, according to people familiar with the matter.
The agreement would boost Saudi Arabia’s ability to buy chips from the likes of Nvidia Corp. and Advanced Micro Devices Inc., which are considered the gold standard for training and running artificial intelligence models, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing confidential conversations.
President Donald Trump is in Riyadh Tuesday, kicking off a broader Middle East trip, and he could announce the deal as soon as this week.
Turkey’s official reserves fell by $15 billion in March, the steepest decline since the 2023 presidential elections, reflecting the extent of concern that’s gripped investors after the jailing of a prominent opposition politician.
Balance of payments data, the broadest measure of trade in goods and services, showed a $4.1 billion deficit in March, compared with a revised shortfall of $4.3 billion the previous month, according to the Turkish central bank.
Monetary policymakers spent billions of dollars from reserves to stem the lira’s sharp depreciation in March, triggered by the detention and later jailing of Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu, seen as President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s biggest challenger in the next presidential elections. Investors dumped lira assets amid fear of large-scale unrest and any spillover of the turbulence to economic policy.
Japanese auto giant Honda missed fourth-quarter earnings estimates as operating profit plunged 76%, with the company bracing for the full impact of US tariffs.
For its financial year ended March, revenue came in at 21.69 trillion yen, compared to the average estimate of 21.63 trillion yen from LSEG and marking a 6.2% rise year on year.
In its earnings release, Honda had downgraded almost every financial metric for its current fiscal year ending in March 2026, compared with its latest full-year results. Its full-year operating profit is projected to fall almost 59% to 500 billion yen.
Japan’s second-biggest automaker explained that the impact of tariff policies worldwide would be very significant on its business, with the frequent revisions making it difficult to formulate an outlook.
Softbank’s Vision Fund business posted a loss in the fiscal year ended March as it booked slowing gains at its massive tech investment arm.
The Vision Fund segment notched a pretax loss of 115.02 billion yen ($777.7 mllion) versus a profit of 128.2 billion yen in the previous fiscal year.
SoftBank said it notched a gain on investment at its Vision Funds of 434.9 billion yen in the fiscal year, a 40% fall from the 724.3 billion yen booked in the previous year.
For the latest fiscal year, SoftBank saw gains on its investments in Chinese ridehailing company Didi as well as South Korean e-commerce firm Coupang. However, the performance of its investment arm was hurt by a drop in value of companies including AutoStore.
European stock markets opened in positive territory on Tuesday as uncertainty over the global trade outlook lingers despite a 90-day pause in the tariff spat between the U.S. and China.
The pan-European Stoxx 600 was 0.26% higher at 8.15 am in London. The UK’s FTSE 100 was 0.12% higher, France’s CAC 40 edged up 0.06% and Germany’s DAX was up 0.16%.
It comes after global markets rallied on Monday after news that Washington and Beijing agreed to slash steep tariffs for 90 days, raising hopes that a burgeoning trade war could be averted.
British businesses cut jobs for a third straight month in April as a £26 billion ($34 billion) tax hike took effect and Donald Trump’s tariffs darkened the global economic outlook.
The number of workers on payrolls dropped 33,000, according to tax data published by the Office for National Statistics on Tuesday.
The figures show how firms are responding to a sharp increase in employment costs announced in the October budget, including a near 7% rise in the minimum wage and higher payroll taxes known as national insurance contributions. They will make worrying reading for the Labour government, which came power to promising to boost employment. Instead, payrolls have fallen by over 150,000 over the last six months.
The cost of shorting the Hong Kong dollar has slumped to an all-time low, as the currency weakens to the middle of its fixed trading band.
One-month forward points on the city’s dollar, which are added to or subtracted from the spot level to calculate the forward rate, dropped to the lowest on record Monday, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That has renewed bearish bets against the city’s currency.
The Hong Kong dollar consolidated near midpoint of its 7.75 to 7.85 per greenback trading range, retreating from the strong end of the band. That’s after the city’s monetary authority intervened via heavy sales of the local dollar last week, a move that boosted liquidity in the market, lowered borrowing costs and thereby reduced the appreciation pressure on the currency.
Bayer AG’s earnings fell less than expected in the first quarter as robust demand for its new cancer and kidney medicines helped offset a decline in agricultural sales.
Adjusted earnings came in at €4.09 billion ($4.54 billion) before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, according to a statement Tuesday. That result outpaced the average analyst estimate of €3.88 billion.
Chief Executive Officer Bill Anderson has pledged to return the pharmaceuticals division to growth this decade, driven by new products including Nubeqa for cancer and kidney medicine Kerendia, both of which saw strong sales growth in the first three months of the year.
China has removed a month-long ban on airlines taking delivery of Boeing Co. planes, according to people familiar with the matter, following a breakthrough in trade talks with the US that temporarily slashed tariffs on each side.
Officials in Beijing have started to tell domestic carriers and government agencies this week that deliveries of US-made aircraft can resume, the people said, asking not to identified because the information is confidential. Discretion has been given for airlines to organize delivery on their own timing and terms, one of the people added.
The resumption of deliveries to China will be an immediate boost to the Boeing. The thawing comes as the world’s two biggest economies agreed to a tariff truce, with the US lowering its combined 145% levies on most Chinese imports to 30% for 90 days. China agreed to slash its 125% duties on US goods to 10%, and remove other countermeasures taken against the US since April 2. Still, the restoration of jet deliveries could be short-lived if the tariff war isn’t resolved during the three-month reprieve.
Chinese stocks fell in Hong Kong on Tuesday, as initial optimism from the tariff truce with the US gave way to concerns that Beijing won’t feel the need to urgently ramp up growth stimulus.
The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index dropped as much as 1.9% after climbing 3% in the previous session on optimism over thawing Sino-US tensions. The onshore benchmark CSI 300 Index erased early gains.
The fading enthusiasm reflects worries that Chinese policymakers may feel less compelled to adopt potent measures, especially more fiscal spending, to shore up a slowing economy. It’s also a sign that investors are shifting their focus toward the material impact of still-higher US import duties, as well as uncertainties over further bilateral talks in the coming months.
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. lifted its US stock targets, as the easing of trade tensions between the US and China fuels a comeback of the “Buy America” trade.
Strategists including David Kostin now see the S&P 500 Index reaching 6,500 in the next 12 months, up from 6,200 previously. The new estimate implies about a gain of about 11% from Monday’s close.
The upgrade follows Monday’s rally on Wall Street after negotiators from the world’s two largest economies agreed to temporarily lower tariffs, with traders betting that a US recession can be avoided. Goldman remains somewhat cautious, however.
Taiwan’s biggest insurers posted a total loss of almost NT$19 billion ($620 million) in April due to currency volatility after US President Donald Trump warned of a wave of global trade tariffs.
The insurers suffered the worst shortfall in a single month in 1 1/2 years, Taipei-based Economic Daily News reported. Among the six biggest, Nanshan Life Insurance Co. posted the largest loss at more than NT$9 billion. KGI Life Insurance Co. was the only one among the largest to avoid a hit.
The big shortfalls came even before the Taiwan dollar’s spike in early May against the greenback, which raised concerns about the industry’s hedging and investment strategies. Shares of the Taiwanese insurers rose on Tuesday, buoyed by a broad rally in the region after the US and China agreed to temporarily lower tariffs.
Iron ore fell as a broad, risk-on lift that followed the US-China trade truce faded, with traders turning their attention back to a challenging industry backdrop.
Futures dropped toward $99 a ton in Singapore, after surging by more than 3% on Monday to the highest close in almost three weeks. That advance came after the world’s two biggest economies announced a massive de-escalation in tariffs.
Looking ahead, China’s steel market — the world’s largest — is poised to enter a seasonal off-peak period, a shift that’s set to put downward pressure on mills’ demand for raw materials including iron ore.
Japanese stocks extended their climb, putting the Topix on track for its longest winning streak in 16 years, after the US and China agreed to de-escalate tariffs, boosting risk-on sentiment and sending the yen lower.
The benchmark gauge rose as much as 1.9% to 2,794.96 in morning Tokyo trade, heading for a 13th straight day of gains, the most since August 2009. The blue-chip Nikkei 225 Stock Average was up as much as 2.3% to 3,8494.06.
The climb comes after the US slashed duties on Chinese products to 30% from 145% for a 90-day period, while Beijing dropped its levy on most goods to 10%, following two days of high-stakes talks in Switzerland. The announcement came after Japan’s stock market closed on Monday.NewsLive TVMarketPopular CategoriesCalculatorsTrending NowLet's Connect with CNBCTV 18Network 18 Group :©TV18 Broadcast Limited. All rights reserved.