Noticias del mercado

1 marzo 2016
  • 23:59

    Schedule for today, Wednesday, Mar 2’2016:

    (time / country / index / period / previous value / forecast)

    00:30 Australia Gross Domestic Product (QoQ) Quarter IV 0.9% 0.5%

    00:30 Australia Gross Domestic Product (YoY) Quarter IV 2.5% 2.6%

    06:45 Switzerland Gross Domestic Product (YoY) Quarter IV 0.8% 0.1%

    06:45 Switzerland Gross Domestic Product (QoQ) Quarter IV 0% 0.2%

    09:30 United Kingdom PMI Construction February 55 55.5

    10:00 Eurozone Producer Price Index, MoM January -0.8% -0.7%

    10:00 Eurozone Producer Price Index (YoY) January -3.0% -2.9%

    10:00 United Kingdom MPC Member Dr Ben Broadbent Speaks

    12:00 U.S. MBA Mortgage Applications February -4.3%

    13:15 U.S. ADP Employment Report February 205 190

    14:00 United Kingdom BOE Deputy Governor for Financial Stability Jon Cunliffe speaks

    15:30 U.S. Crude Oil Inventories February 3.502

    19:00 U.S. Fed's Beige Book

    22:30 Australia AIG Services Index February 48.4

  • 22:25

    U.S. stocks closed

    U.S. stocks rallied to a seven-week high after data indicated manufacturing in the world's largest economy may be stabilizing, while optimism that central banks from Asia to Europe will add to stimulus supported emerging-market currencies and commodities.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average surged more than 340 points, while the Standard & Poor's 500 Index rebounded from a two-day drop, climbing back to a level last seen at the start of the year. A gauge of emerging-market shares advanced the most since Feb. 15 as the ruble and Brazil's real strengthened. Yields on 10-year Treasury notes jumped nine basis points to 1.83 percent, while gold fell following its steepest monthly rally since 2012. Crude topped $34 a barrel in New York, while the yen pared back some gains.

    While February marked a fourth consecutive monthly slide for global stocks, signs that financial tension in China and a slump in commodities are abating has seen shares recover more than 5 percent since Feb. 11. Data suggesting that American consumers can still power the world's largest economy and hints from central banks in Asia and Europe that more stimulus is at the ready underpinned the revival.

    U.S. equities got a boost after data showed American factory activity in February shrank less than forecast as gains in new orders and production provided signs that the beleaguered industry could soon stabilize. Manufacturing should also find a source of strength in domestic demand, which is being boosted by consumers with solid job gains and a nascent pickup in wage growth. A rebound in oil prices in the final two weeks of February also helped stabilize equity markets.

  • 21:00

    DJIA 16855.21 338.71 2.05%, NASDAQ 4678.86 120.91 2.65%, S&P 500 1975.79 43.56 2.25%

  • 18:12

    Italian economy expands 0.8% in 2015

    The Italian statistical office Istat released its gross domestic product (GDP) data for Italy on Tuesday. The Italian GDP increased 0.8% in 2015, after a 0.3% drop in 2014.

    Final consumption expenditure climbed by 0.5% in 2015, gross fixed capital formation rose by 0.8%, imports rose by 6.0%, while exports increased by 4.3%.

    General government net borrowing was -2.6% of GDP in 2015, up from -3.0% of GDP in 2014.

    General government debt was 132.6% of GDP.

  • 18:10

    Oil advanced

    Oil prices rose on comments from Russian President Vladimir Putin and better then expeted ISM data.

    Vladimir Putin said Russian oil companies had agreed not to raise oil production this year, but made no mention of any producer-coordinated output cuts. He added it was Moscow's task to ensure stability in the Russian oil industry and that weak oil prices had been a result of a global economic slowdown and speculative deals.

    Oil got support from signs that a global supply glut is easing are beginning to emerge. Exports from Iraq's southern fields dropped in February to an average of 3.225 million bpd, the country's oil ministry said.

    The Institute for Supply Management released its manufacturing purchasing managers' index for the U.S. on Tuesday. The index rose to 49.5 in February from 48.2 in January. Analysts had expected the index to increase to 48.5.

    WTI for delivery in April climbed 2.04% to stand at $34.27 a barrel. Brent for May advanced 1.53% to $37.13 a barrel compared with yesterday's close.

  • 18:05

    Capital spending in Japan jumps 8.5% in the fourth quarter

    Japan's Ministry of Finance released its capital spending data on late Monday evening. Capital spending in Japan jumped 8.5% in the fourth quarter, after a 11.2% gain in the third quarter.

    Capital spending excluding software soared 8.9% in the fourth quarter, after a 11.2% rise in the third quarter.

    Company profits in Japan declined 1.7% in the fourth quarter, while company sales were down 2.7%.

  • 18:04

    European stocks closed: FTSE 6152.88 55.79 0.92%, DAX 9717.16 221.76 2.34%, CAC 40 4406.84 53.29 1.22%

  • 18:00

    European stocks close: stocks closed higher on corporate news and on a weaker euro

    Stock indices closed higher on corporate news and on a weaker euro. The euro fell against the U.S. dollar after the release of the mixed economic data from the Eurozone. Eurostat released its unemployment data for the Eurozone on Tuesday. Eurozone's unemployment rate declined to 10.3% in January from 10.4% in December. It was the lowest reading since August 2011. Analysts had expected the unemployment rate to remain unchanged at 10.4%.

    Markit Economics released its final manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) for the Eurozone on Tuesday. Eurozone's final manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) dropped to 51.2 in February from 52.3 in January, up from the preliminary reading of 51.0.

    The drop was driven by a softer growth in production, new orders, export business and employment.

    "With factory output in the Eurozone showing the smallest rise for a year in February, concerns are growing that the region is facing yet another year of sluggish growth in 2016, or even another downturn," Chris Williamson, Chief Economist at Markit said.

    "With all indicators - from output and demand to employment and prices - turning down, the survey will add pressure on the ECB to act quickly and aggressively to avert another economic downturn," he added.

    Germany's final Markit/BME manufacturing PMI fell to 50.5 in February from 52.3 in January, up from the preliminary reading of 50.2. The index was driven by declines in all subindexes.

    France's final manufacturing PMI increased to 50.2 in February from 50.0 in January, down from the preliminary reading of 50.3. The index was driven by a rise in backlogs of work.

    Markit Economics released its manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) for the U.K. on Tuesday. The Markit/Chartered Institute of Procurement & Supply manufacturing PMI for the U.K. decreased to 50.8 in February from 52.9 in January, missing expectations for a fall to 52.2. it was the lowest level since April 2013.

    The decrease was driven by a drop in output.

    "The near-stagnation of manufacturing highlights the ongoing fragility of the economic recovery at the start of the year and provides further cover for the Bank of England's increasingly dovish stance. The breadth of the slowdown is especially worrisome," Markit's Senior Economist Rob Dobson said.

    Higher oil price also supported stocks. Oil prices rose on hopes for lower oil output.

    Indexes on the close:

    Name Price Change Change %

    FTSE 100 6,152.88 +55.79 +0.92 %

    DAX 9,717.16 +221.76 +2.34 %

    CAC 40 4,406.84 +53.29 +1.22 %

  • 17:56

    WSE: Session Results

    Polish equity market closed lower on Tuesday. The broad market measure, the WIG Index, slid down 0.19%. Sector-wise, telecommunication sector (-3.20%) was weakest, while information technology (+2.58%) outperformed.

    The large-cap stocks inched up by 0.04%. Within the index components, thermal coal miner BOGDANKA (WSE: LWB) and IT-company ASSECO POLAND (WSE: ACP) became the session's best performers, gaining 3.45% and 3.33% respectively. On the other side of the ledger, footwear retailer CCC (WSE: CCC) recorded the biggest drop, down 3.4%, despite reported strong monthly sales growth in February. It was followed by utilities names TAURON PE (WSE: TPE) and ENEA (WSE: ENA), plunging by 2.77% and 2.53% respectively.

  • 17:53

    Oil prices increase on hopes for lower oil output

    Oil prices rose on hopes for lower oil output. Reuters reported on Monday that the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries' (OPEC) oil production fell in February due to the supply disruption from Iraq. OPEC's oil output decreased to 32.37 million barrels per day (bpd) in February from 32.65 million in January.

    The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) said on Monday that the oil production in the U.S. declined by 43,000 bpd in December to 9.26 million bpd. It was the lowest level since November 2014.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Tuesday that Russian oil companies decided not rise their oil output this year.

    WTI crude oil for April delivery increased to $34.27 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

    Brent crude oil for April rose to $36.86 a barrel on ICE Futures Europe.

  • 17:46

    Gold fell on better then expected ISM data

    Gold fell after better-than-expected U.S. data showed improvement in the business sector. The Institute for Supply Management released its manufacturing purchasing managers' index for the U.S. on Tuesday. The index rose to 49.5 in February from 48.2 in January. Analysts had expected the index to increase to 48.5.

    Gold futures for March delivery decreased to $1232,60 (-0,33%) per ounce.

  • 17:44

    Gold declines on a stronger U.S. dollar

    Gold price fell on a stronger U.S. dollar. The greenback increased against other currencies on the better-than-expected U.S. economic data. Markit Economics released its final manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) for the U.S. on Tuesday. The U.S. final manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) decreased to 51.3 in February from 52.4 in January, up from the previous estimate of 51.0. The index was driven by a slower pace of growth in output and new orders.

    The Institute for Supply Management released its manufacturing purchasing managers' index for the U.S. on Tuesday. The index rose to 49.5 in February from 48.2 in January. Analysts had expected the index to increase to 48.5. The increase was mainly driven by rises in production and employment. The production index increased to 52.8 in February from 50.2 in January, while the employment index was up to 48.5 from 45.9.

    March futures for gold on the COMEX today decreased to 1231.30 dollars per ounce.

  • 17:32

    Australia’s current account deficit widens to A$21.1 billion in the fourth quarter

    The Australian Bureau of Statistics released its current account data on Tuesday. Australia's current account deficit widened to A$21.1 billion in the fourth quarter from A$18.8 billion in the third quarter, missing expectations for a decline to a deficit of A$20.0 billion. The third quarter's figure was revised down from a deficit of A$18.1 billion.

    The seasonally adjusted deficit on goods and services rose by 35% to A$9.93 billion in the fourth quarter, which was 0.0% of gross domestic product.

    Australia's net foreign debt climbed 2% in the fourth quarter.

  • 17:32

    Wall Street. Major U.S. stock-indexes rose

    Major U.S. stock-indexes higher on Tuesday morning, led by financial stocks, as weak manufacturing data globally raised hopes of a further easing of monetary policies. Manufacturing activity across much of Asia shrank in February, with China falling for a seventh straight month. In Europe, factory growth waned, dealing a further blow to policymakers who are struggling to stimulate their economies and spur inflation.

    Most of Dow stocks in positive area (28 of 30). Top looser - United Technologies Corporation (UTX, -3,22%). Top gainer - JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM, +2,90%).

    Most of S&P sectors also in positive area. Top looser - Utilities (-0,1%). Top gainer - Financial (+1,9%).


    At the moment:

    Dow 16701.00 +204.00 +1.24%

    S&P 500 1956.75 +27.25 +1.41%

    Nasdaq 100 4279.75 +78.50 +1.87%

    Oil 33.83 +0.08 +0.24%

    Gold 1232.80 -1.60 -0.13%

    U.S. 10yr 1.81 +0.07

  • 17:01

    Australian Industry Group’s services purchasing managers’ index for Australia rises to 53.5 in February, the highest level since July 2010

    The Australian Industry Group (AiG) released its manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) for Australia on the late Monday evening. The index rose to 53.5 in February from 51.5 in January. It was the highest level since July 2010.

    A reading above 50 indicates expansion in the sector, while a reading below 50 indicates contraction in the sector.

    Four of the five activity sub-indexes were below 50 points in February.

    Main contributor to the rise was production.

  • 16:52

    Building permits in Australia drop 7.5% in January

    The Australian Bureau of Statistics released its building permits data on Tuesday. Building permits in Australia dropped 7.5% in January, missing expectations for a 2.0% fall, after a 8.6% rise in December. December's figure was revised down from a 9.2% increase.

    Building permits for private sector houses slid 6.0% in January, while building permits for private sector dwellings excluding houses plunged 10.8%.

    The seasonally adjusted estimate of the value of total building approved was down 1.8% in January.

    On a yearly basis, building permits fell 15.5% in January, after a 2.5% decrease in December.

  • 16:47

    Construction spending in the U.S. is up 1.5% in January

    The U.S. Commerce Department released construction spending data on Tuesday. Construction spending in the U.S. rose 1.5% in January, exceeding expectations for a 0.4% gain, after a 0.6% increase in December. December's figure was revised up from a 0.1% rise.

    The increase was mainly driven by a rise in private and public spending. Total private construction spending was up 0.5% in January, public spending climbed 4.4%.

    Spending on private residential construction was flat in January, while spending on private non-residential construction projects increased 2.5%.

  • 16:42

    Canadian manufacturing PMI rises to 49.4 in February

    Royal Bank of Canada (RBC), the Supply Chain Management Association (SCMA) and Markit Economics released their RBC Canadian manufacturing PMI on Tuesday. The index rose to 49.4 in February from 49.3 in January. It was the highest level since August 2015.

    The rise was driven by a softer decline in output and new orders.

    "The U.S. expansion alongside a more competitive Canadian dollar is continuing to drive stronger export sales and stabilize manufacturing conditions," RBC senior vice-president and chief economist, Craig Wright, said.

  • 16:17

    ISM manufacturing purchasing managers’ index rises to 49.5 in February

    The Institute for Supply Management released its manufacturing purchasing managers' index for the U.S. on Tuesday. The index rose to 49.5 in February from 48.2 in January. Analysts had expected the index to increase to 48.5.

    A reading above 50 indicates expansion, below indicates contraction.

    The increase was mainly driven by rises in production and employment. The production index increased to 52.8 in February from 50.2 in January, while the employment index was up to 48.5 from 45.9.

    The new orders index remained unchanged at 51.5 in February.

    The price index increased to 38.5 in February from 33.5 in January.

  • 16:07

    U.S. final manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) decreases to 51.3 in February

    Markit Economics released its final manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) for the U.S. on Tuesday. The U.S. final manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) decreased to 51.3 in February from 52.4 in January, up from the previous estimate of 51.0.

    A reading above 50 indicates expansion in economic activity.

    The index was driven by a slower pace of growth in output and new orders.

    "The February data add to signs of distress in the US manufacturing economy. Production and order book growth continues to worsen, led by falling exports. Jobs are being added at a slower pace and output prices are dropping at a rate not seen since mid-2012," Markit's Chief Economist Chris Williamson said.

  • 16:00

    U.S.: Construction Spending, m/m, January 1.5% (forecast 0.4%)

  • 16:00

    U.S.: ISM Manufacturing, February 49.5 (forecast 48.5)

  • 15:45

    U.S.: Manufacturing PMI, February 51.3 (forecast 51)

  • 15:36

    Swiss retail sales rise 0.2% year-on-year in January

    The Federal Statistical Office released its retail sales data for Switzerland on Tuesday. Retail sales in Switzerland were up at an annual rate of 0.2% in January, beating expectations for a 1.2% decline, after a 1.7% decrease in December. December's figure was revised down from a 1.6% drop.

    Sales of food, beverages and tobacco declined at an annual rate of 1.0% in January, while non-food sales climbed 2.7%.

    On a monthly basis, retail sales fell by 0.3% in January, after a 0.9% rise in December. December's figure was revised down from a 1.1% gain.

    Sales of food, beverages and tobacco were flat in January, while non-food sales decreased 0.2%.

  • 15:33

    U.S. Stocks open: Dow +0.43%, Nasdaq +0.78%, S&P +0.67%

  • 15:24

    Swiss manufacturing PMI climbs to 51.6 in February

    Credit Suisse and procure.ch released their manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) for Switzerland on Tuesday. The manufacturing purchasing managers' index in Switzerland climbed to 51.6 in February from 50.0 in January, beating expectations for a decrease to 49.6.

    A reading above 50 indicates contraction.

    The increase was largely driven by rises in production and backlog of orders. The production increased to 56.9 in February from 54.6 In January, while the backlog of orders sub-index jumped to 53.3 from 49.3, the highest level since October 2014.

    Purchase prices were up to 43.8 in February from 41.7 in January.

    Employment declined to 45.6 in February from 47.9 in January.

  • 15:16

    Italy’s manufacturing PMI slides to 52.2 in February

    Markit Economics released its manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) for Italy on Tuesday. Italy's Markit/ADACI manufacturing PMI slid to 52.2 in February from 53.2 in January.

    The decline was driven by a softer growth in output and new orders.

    "February survey data confirm that the manufacturing sector has started 2016 on a softer footing. Growth rates for both output and new orders waned further from the highs seen late in 2015, while manufacturers' buying levels failed to rise for the first time in over a year," Markit economist Phil Smith said.

  • 15:16

    Before the bell: S&P futures +0.71%, NASDAQ futures +0.68%

    U.S. stock-index futures rose.

    Global Stocks:

    Nikkei 16,085.51 +58.75 +0.37%

    Hang Seng 19,407.46 +295.53 +1.55%

    Shanghai Composite 2,733.91 +45.93 +1.71%

    FTSE 6,130.31 +33.22 +0.54%

    CAC 4,378.31 +24.76 +0.57%

    DAX 9,623.96 +128.56 +1.35%

    Crude oil $34.27 (+1.54%)

    Gold $1243.90 (+0.77%)

  • 15:02

    Greece’s manufacturing PMI declines to 48.4 in February

    Markit Economics released its manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) for Greece on Tuesday. Greece's manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) declined to 48.4 in February from 50.0 in January.

    Output and new orders fell in February, while input prices showed the biggest drop since January 2009.

    "The key areas covered by the survey provided alarming indicators on the current health of the Greek manufacturing sector. Output contracted further amid a solid decline in incoming new work, while job cuts were evident after another substantial deterioration in outstanding business levels was reported," Markit economist Samuel Agass said.

  • 14:55

    Wall Street. Stocks before the bell

    (company / ticker / price / change, % / volume)


    Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc., NYSE

    FCX

    7.9

    3.54%

    100.3K

    Yandex N.V., NASDAQ

    YNDX

    13.33

    3.17%

    9.2K

    Ford Motor Co.

    F

    12.74

    1.84%

    23.8K

    ALCOA INC.

    AA

    9.09

    1.79%

    42.5K

    Visa

    V

    73.66

    1.75%

    2.2K

    General Motors Company, NYSE

    GM

    29.83

    1.32%

    1.0K

    Yahoo! Inc., NASDAQ

    YHOO

    32.2

    1.29%

    0.6K

    Twitter, Inc., NYSE

    TWTR

    18.33

    1.16%

    7.8K

    Tesla Motors, Inc., NASDAQ

    TSLA

    194

    1.08%

    13.3K

    Amazon.com Inc., NASDAQ

    AMZN

    558.25

    1.04%

    6.7K

    E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Co

    DD

    61.5

    1.03%

    0.7K

    Citigroup Inc., NYSE

    C

    39.25

    1.03%

    10.3K

    Chevron Corp

    CVX

    84.29

    1.02%

    0.1K

    American Express Co

    AXP

    56.09

    0.92%

    10.0K

    Facebook, Inc.

    FB

    107.89

    0.91%

    31.7K

    United Technologies Corp

    UTX

    97.49

    0.90%

    0.4K

    Johnson & Johnson

    JNJ

    106.12

    0.86%

    3.0K

    The Coca-Cola Co

    KO

    43.49

    0.83%

    8.1K

    JPMorgan Chase and Co

    JPM

    56.75

    0.80%

    1.0K

    Walt Disney Co

    DIS

    96.21

    0.72%

    0.2K

    Apple Inc.

    AAPL

    97.39

    0.72%

    54.3K

    3M Co

    MMM

    157.89

    0.65%

    0.8K

    Intel Corp

    INTC

    29.78

    0.64%

    8.7K

    Procter & Gamble Co

    PG

    80.8

    0.64%

    0.4K

    Pfizer Inc

    PFE

    29.85

    0.61%

    18.8K

    Home Depot Inc

    HD

    124.85

    0.59%

    24.9K

    Exxon Mobil Corp

    XOM

    80.6

    0.56%

    9.3K

    Hewlett-Packard Co.

    HPQ

    10.75

    0.56%

    1.3K

    ALTRIA GROUP INC.

    MO

    61.9

    0.54%

    1.3K

    Merck & Co Inc

    MRK

    50.46

    0.50%

    0.6K

    Barrick Gold Corporation, NYSE

    ABX

    13.96

    0.50%

    24.5K

    Goldman Sachs

    GS

    150.26

    0.49%

    2.6K

    Microsoft Corp

    MSFT

    51.13

    0.49%

    11.1K

    General Electric Co

    GE

    29.28

    0.48%

    0.4K

    Cisco Systems Inc

    CSCO

    26.3

    0.46%

    0.2K

    AT&T Inc

    T

    37.02

    0.19%

    0.3K

    Verizon Communications Inc

    VZ

    50.81

    0.16%

    5.7K

    Wal-Mart Stores Inc

    WMT

    66.34

    0.00%

    0.4K

    AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL GROUP

    AIG

    50.2

    0.00%

    0.1K

    Deere & Company, NYSE

    DE

    80.18

    0.00%

    0.7K

    Google Inc.

    GOOG

    697.77

    0.00%

    11.4K

    Starbucks Corporation, NASDAQ

    SBUX

    58.1

    -0.19%

    0.3K

  • 14:54

    Canada's GDP climbs 0.2% in the fourth quarter

    Statistics Canada released GDP (gross domestic product) growth data on Tuesday. Canada's GDP growth rose 0.2% in December, exceeding expectations for a 0.1% gain, after a 0.3% increase in November.

    On a quarterly basis, GDP climbed 0.2% in the fourth quarter, after 0.6% rise in the third quarter.

    The quarterly rise was driven by lower final domestic demand and exports. Final domestic demand fell 0.2% in the fourth quarter, after a flat reading in the third quarter.

    Exports of goods and services decreased 0.6% in the fourth quarter, while imports of goods and services declined 2.3%.

    Household final consumption expenditure was up 0.2% in the fourth quarter as spending on services rose 0.4% in the fourth quarter.

    The household saving rate remained unchanged at 4.0% in the fourth quarter.

    Business gross fixed capital formation dropped 1.7% in the fourth quarter.

    On a yearly basis, GDP rose 0.8% in the fourth quarter, beating expectations for a flat reading, after a 2.4% gain in the third quarter. The third quarter's figure was revised up from a 2.3% increase.

    In 2015 as whole, Canada's economy expanded 1.2%, after a 2.5% growth in 2014.

  • 14:45

    Option expiries for today's 10:00 ET NY cut

    USD/JPY: 112.90-113.00 (USD 397m) 113.35 (225m) 114.00 (205m) 114.45 (200m)

    EURUSD: 1.0680 (EUR 605m) 1.0800 (670m) 1.0850 (405m) 1.0887 (303m) 1.0900-10 (1.75bln) 1.0930 (382m) 1.1000 (1.32bln)

    AUD/USD: 0.7000 (AUD 201m) ) 0.7100 (469m) 0.7200 (370m)

    USD/CAD 1.3650 (USD 260m)

    NZD/USD 0.6390 (NZD 469m) 0.6600 (666m) 0.6650 (212m)

  • 14:44

    Upgrades and downgrades before the market open

    Upgrades:

    Freeport-McMoRan (FCX) upgraded to Neutral from Underperform at BofA/Merrill


    Downgrades:

    Freeport-McMoRan (FCX) downgraded to Sector Perform from Outperform at Scotiaban

    United Tech (UTX) downgraded to Sector Perform from Outperform at RBC Capital Mkts; target raised to $109 from $100

    Citigroup (C) downgraded to Neutral from Overweight at Atlantic Equities

    Bank of America (BAC) downgraded to Neutral from Overweight at Atlantic Equities


    Other:

  • 14:31

    Canada: GDP (m/m) , December 0.2% (forecast 0.1%)

  • 14:31

    Canada: GDP (YoY), Quarter IV 0.8% (forecast 0%)

  • 14:31

    Canada: GDP QoQ, Quarter IV 0.2%

  • 14:24

    Spain’s manufacturing PMI drops to 54.1 in February

    Markit Economics released its manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) for Spain on Tuesday. Spain's manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) declined to 54.1 in February from 55.4 in January.

    The decrease was driven by a slower growth in output, while input costs fell.

    "Spanish manufacturers continued to rise above economic and political uncertainty in February, once again increasing output at a rapid rate and taking on extra staff at the fastest pace since the summer of 2015," a senior economist at Markit Andrew Harker said.

  • 14:20

    Final Markit/Nikkei manufacturing purchasing managers' index for Japan declines to 50.1 in February

    The final Markit/Nikkei manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) for Japan declined to 50.1 in February from 50.2 in January, down from the preliminary reading of 50.2.

    A reading above 50 indicates expansion, a reading below 50 indicates contraction of activity.

    The index was driven by a slower growth in output and a drop in new orders.

    "Operating conditions in the Japanese manufacturing sector was little-changed in February, following a solid improvement in January. Production growth slowed to a fractional rate, alongside a marginal contraction in new orders," economist at Markit, Amy Brownbill, said.

  • 14:15

    Foreign exchange market. European session: the euro traded mixed against the U.S. dollar after the release of the mixed economic data from the Eurozone

    Economic calendar (GMT0):

    (Time/ Region/ Event/ Period/ Previous/ Forecast/ Actual)

    00:30 Australia Current Account, bln Quarter IV -18.8 Revised From -18.1 -20 -21.1

    00:30 Australia Building Permits, m/m January 8.6% Revised From 9.2% -2% -7.5%

    01:00 China Manufacturing PMI February 49.4 49.3 49.0

    01:00 China Non-Manufacturing PMI February 53.5 52.7

    01:35 Japan Manufacturing PMI (Finally) February 52.3 52.1

    01:45 China Markit/Caixin Manufacturing PMI February 48.4 48.0

    03:30 Australia Announcement of the RBA decision on the discount rate 2% 2% 2%

    03:30 Australia RBA Rate Statement

    08:15 Switzerland Retail Sales (MoM) January 1.1% -0.3%

    08:15 Switzerland Retail Sales Y/Y January -1.7% Revised From -1.6% -1.2% 0.2%

    08:30 Switzerland Manufacturing PMI February 50 49.6 51.6

    08:50 France Manufacturing PMI (Finally) February 50 50.3 50.2

    08:55 Germany Unemployment Rate s.a. February 6.2% 6.2% 6.2%

    08:55 Germany Unemployment Change February -20 -10 -10

    08:55 Germany Manufacturing PMI (Finally) February 52.3 50.2 50.5

    09:00 Eurozone Manufacturing PMI (Finally) February 52.3 51 51.2

    09:30 United Kingdom Purchasing Manager Index Manufacturing February 52.9 52.2 50.8

    10:00 Eurozone Unemployment Rate January 10.4% 10.4% 10.3%

    The U.S. dollar traded mixed against the most major currencies ahead of the release of the U.S. economic data. The final manufacturing purchasing managers' index is expected to decline to 51.0 in February from 52.4 in January.

    The ISM manufacturing purchasing managers' index is expected to rise to 48.5 in February from 48.2 in January.

    The euro traded mixed against the U.S. dollar after the release of the mixed economic data from the Eurozone. Eurostat released its unemployment data for the Eurozone on Tuesday. Eurozone's unemployment rate declined to 10.3% in January from 10.4% in December. It was the lowest reading since August 2011. Analysts had expected the unemployment rate to remain unchanged at 10.4%.

    Markit Economics released its final manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) for the Eurozone on Tuesday. Eurozone's final manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) dropped to 51.2 in February from 52.3 in January, up from the preliminary reading of 51.0.

    The drop was driven by a softer growth in production, new orders, export business and employment.

    "With factory output in the Eurozone showing the smallest rise for a year in February, concerns are growing that the region is facing yet another year of sluggish growth in 2016, or even another downturn," Chris Williamson, Chief Economist at Markit said.

    "With all indicators - from output and demand to employment and prices - turning down, the survey will add pressure on the ECB to act quickly and aggressively to avert another economic downturn," he added.

    Germany's final Markit/BME manufacturing PMI fell to 50.5 in February from 52.3 in January, up from the preliminary reading of 50.2. The index was driven by declines in all subindexes.

    France's final manufacturing PMI increased to 50.2 in February from 50.0 in January, down from the preliminary reading of 50.3. The index was driven by a rise in backlogs of work.

    The British pound traded higher against the U.S. dollar after the release of the U.K. manufacturing PMI data. Markit Economics released its manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) for the U.K. on Tuesday. The Markit/Chartered Institute of Procurement & Supply manufacturing PMI for the U.K. decreased to 50.8 in February from 52.9 in January, missing expectations for a fall to 52.2. it was the lowest level since April 2013.

    The decrease was driven by a drop in output.

    "The near-stagnation of manufacturing highlights the ongoing fragility of the economic recovery at the start of the year and provides further cover for the Bank of England's increasingly dovish stance. The breadth of the slowdown is especially worrisome," Markit's Senior Economist Rob Dobson said.

    The Canadian dollar traded mixed against the U.S. dollar ahead of the release of the Canadian GDP data. Canada's GDP growth is expected to rise 0.1% in December, after a 0.3% gain in November.

    EUR/USD: the currency pair traded mixed

    GBP/USD: the currency pair increased to $1.4017

    USD/JPY: the currency pair rose to Y113.33

    The most important news that are expected (GMT0):

    13:30 Canada GDP (m/m) December 0.3% 0.1%

    13:30 Canada GDP QoQ Quarter IV 0.6%

    13:30 Canada GDP (YoY) Quarter IV 2.3% 0%

    14:45 U.S. Manufacturing PMI (Finally) February 52.4 51

    15:00 U.S. Construction Spending, m/m January 0.1% 0.4%

    15:00 U.S. ISM Manufacturing February 48.2 48.5

  • 13:52

    Orders

    EUR/USD

    Offers 1.0900 1.0920 1.0935 1.0950 1.0975-80 1.1000 1.1025-30.1050

    Bids 1.0850 1.0830 1.0800 1.0785 1.0750 1.0730 1.0700


    GBP/USD

    Offers 1.3985 1.4000 1.4020-25 1.4050 1.4080 1.4100

    Bids 1.3920 1.3900 1.3880-85 1.3860 1.3835 1.3820 1.3800


    EUR/JPY

    Offers 123.25 123.45-50 123.80 124.00 124.50124.80 125.00

    Bids 122.50 122.30 122.00 121.50 121.00


    EUR/GBP

    Offers 0.7820-25 0.7850 0.7880 0.7900 0.7925-30 0.7950

    Bids 0.7780-85 0.7750 0.7730 0.7700


    USD/JPY

    Offers 113.50 113.65 113.85 114.00 114.30 114.50

    Bids 113.00 112.70-75 112.50 112.25-30 112.00


    AUD/USD

    Offers 0.7180 0.7200 0.7235 0.7250-55

    Bids 0.7125-30 0.7100 0.7080 0.7065 0.7050 0.7000

  • 12:29

    European stock markets mid session: stocks traded lower as oil prices increased

    Stock indices traded higher as oil prices rose. Oil prices increased on news that OPEC's output fell in February. According to a Reuters survey, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries' (OPEC) oil production fell in February due to the supply disruption from Iraq. OPEC's oil output decreased to 32.37 million barrels per day (bpd) in February from 32.65 million in January.

    Meanwhile, market participants eyed the economic data from the Eurozone. Eurostat released its unemployment data for the Eurozone on Tuesday. Eurozone's unemployment rate declined to 10.3% in January from 10.4% in December. It was the lowest reading since August 2011. Analysts had expected the unemployment rate to remain unchanged at 10.4%.

    Markit Economics released its final manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) for the Eurozone on Tuesday. Eurozone's final manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) dropped to 51.2 in February from 52.3 in January, up from the preliminary reading of 51.0.

    The drop was driven by a softer growth in production, new orders, export business and employment.

    "With factory output in the Eurozone showing the smallest rise for a year in February, concerns are growing that the region is facing yet another year of sluggish growth in 2016, or even another downturn," Chris Williamson, Chief Economist at Markit said.

    "With all indicators - from output and demand to employment and prices - turning down, the survey will add pressure on the ECB to act quickly and aggressively to avert another economic downturn," he added.

    Germany's final Markit/BME manufacturing PMI fell to 50.5 in February from 52.3 in January, up from the preliminary reading of 50.2. The index was driven by declines in all subindexes.

    France's final manufacturing PMI increased to 50.2 in February from 50.0 in January, down from the preliminary reading of 50.3. The index was driven by a rise in backlogs of work.

    Markit Economics released its manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) for the U.K. on Tuesday. The Markit/Chartered Institute of Procurement & Supply manufacturing PMI for the U.K. decreased to 50.8 in February from 52.9 in January, missing expectations for a fall to 52.2. it was the lowest level since April 2013.

    The decrease was driven by a drop in output.

    "The near-stagnation of manufacturing highlights the ongoing fragility of the economic recovery at the start of the year and provides further cover for the Bank of England's increasingly dovish stance. The breadth of the slowdown is especially worrisome," Markit's Senior Economist Rob Dobson said.

    Current figures:

    Name Price Change Change %

    FTSE 100 6,132 +34.91 +0.57 %

    DAX 9,630.37 +134.97 +1.42 %

    CAC 40 4,377.68 +24.13 +0.55 %

  • 12:23

    Markit/Chartered Institute of Procurement & Supply manufacturing PMI for the U.K. decreases to 50.8 in February

    Markit Economics released its manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) for the U.K. on Tuesday. The Markit/Chartered Institute of Procurement & Supply manufacturing PMI for the U.K. decreased to 50.8 in February from 52.9 in January, missing expectations for a fall to 52.2. it was the lowest level since April 2013.

    A reading above 50 indicates expansion.

    The decrease was driven by a drop in output.

    "The near-stagnation of manufacturing highlights the ongoing fragility of the economic recovery at the start of the year and provides further cover for the Bank of England's increasingly dovish stance. The breadth of the slowdown is especially worrisome," Markit's Senior Economist Rob Dobson said.

  • 12:18

    France’s final manufacturing PMI increases to 50.2 in February

    Markit Economics released its final manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) for France on Tuesday. France's final manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) increased to 50.2 in February from 50.0 in January, down from the preliminary reading of 50.3.

    The index was driven by a rise in backlogs of work.

    "Falling new orders were again the source of weakness, leading firms to cut production levels slightly. Meanwhile, the survey's price indices point to continued downward pressure on already low inflation," Markit Senior Economist Jack Kennedy said.

  • 12:14

    Germany’s final manufacturing PMI falls to 50.5 in February

    Markit Economics released its final manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) for Germany on Tuesday. Germany's final Markit/BME manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) fell to 50.5 in February from 52.3 in January, up from the preliminary reading of 50.2.

    The index was driven by declines in all subindexes.

    "It looks as if the German manufacturing engine has run out of steam, with the headline PMI falling to a 15- month low in February. Faced with weak domestic and foreign demand and slow production growth, manufacturers reduced their workforce numbers for the first time in one-and-a-half years," Markit economist Oliver Kolodseike said.

  • 12:09

    Eurozone’s final manufacturing PMI drops to 51.2 in February

    Markit Economics released its final manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) for the Eurozone on Tuesday. Eurozone's final manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) dropped to 51.2 in February from 52.3 in January, up from the preliminary reading of 51.0.

    The drop was driven by a softer growth in production, new orders, export business and employment.

    "With factory output in the Eurozone showing the smallest rise for a year in February, concerns are growing that the region is facing yet another year of sluggish growth in 2016, or even another downturn," Chris Williamson, Chief Economist at Markit said.

    "With all indicators - from output and demand to employment and prices - turning down, the survey will add pressure on the ECB to act quickly and aggressively to avert another economic downturn," he added.

  • 12:04

    Italy’s unemployment rate falls to 11.5% in January

    The Italian statistical office Istat released its unemployment data on Tuesday. The seasonally adjusted unemployment rate fell to 11.5% in January from 11.6% in December. December's figure was revised up from 11.4%.

    The number of unemployed people was 2.951 million in January, unchanged from the month before.

    The youth unemployment rate increased to 39.3 in January from 38.7% in December.

    The employment rate increased to 56.8% in January from 56.7% in December.

  • 11:57

    Number of unemployed people in Germany declines by 10,000 in February

    The Federal Labour Agency released its unemployment figures for Germany on Tuesday. The number of unemployed people in Germany fell by 10,000 in February, in line with expectations, after a 19,000 decrease in January. January's figure was revised down from a 20,000 decline.

    The unemployment rate remained unchanged at 6.2% in February, in line with expectations.

    The number of unemployed people was 1.83 million in January, according to Destatis.

    Destatis said that Germany's adjusted unemployment rate declined to 4.3% in January from 4.4% in December.

    The employment rate rose to an adjusted rate of 65.7 in January from 65.4% in December, according to Destatis.

  • 11:50

    Eurozone's unemployment rate drops to 10.3% in January, the lowest reading since August 2011

    Eurostat released its unemployment data for the Eurozone on Tuesday. Eurozone's unemployment rate declined to 10.3% in January from 10.4% in December. It was the lowest reading since August 2011.

    Analysts had expected the unemployment rate to remain unchanged at 10.4%.

    There were 16.647 million unemployed in the Eurozone in January, down by 105.000 from December.

    The lowest unemployment rate in the Eurozone in January was recorded in Germany (4.3%) and Malta (5.1%), and the highest in Greece (24.6% in November 2015) and Spain (20.5%).

    The youth unemployment rate was 22.0% in the Eurozone in January, compared to 22.8% in January a year ago.

  • 11:36

    Official data: Chinese manufacturing PMI declines to 49.0 in February, the lowest reading since November 2011

    The Chinese manufacturing PMI fell to 49.0 in February from 49.4 in January, according to the Chinese government. It was the lowest reading since November 2011.

    Analysts had expected the index to decline to 49.3.

    A reading above the 50 mark indicates expansion, a reading below 50 indicates contraction.

    The new orders subindex fell to 48.6 in February from 49.5 in January, while the production subindex decclined to 50.2 from 51.4

    The services PMI decreased to 52.7 in February from 53.5 in January.

  • 11:10

    Chinese Markit/Caixin manufacturing PMI falls to 48.0 in February

    The Chinese Markit/Caixin manufacturing PMI declined to 48.0 in February from 48.4 in January. The decrease was driven by a drop in output and new orders.

    "The index readings for all key categories including output, new orders and employment signalled that conditions worsened, in line with signs that the economy's road to stability remains bumpy," Dr. He Fan, Chief Economist at Caixin Insight Group, said.

    "The government needs to press ahead with reforms, while adopting moderate stimulus policies and strengthening support of the economy in other ways to prevent it from falling off a cliff," he added.

  • 11:00

    Eurozone: Unemployment Rate , January 10.3% (forecast 10.4%)

  • 10:58

    New York Fed President William Dudley: the downside risks to the U.S. outlook increased

    New York Fed President William Dudley said on Tuesday that the downside risks to the U.S. outlook increased.

    "The balance of risks to my growth and inflation outlooks may be starting to tilt slightly to the downside," he said.

    Dudley added that the tightening of financial market conditions could have a significant negative impact on the U.S. economy.

  • 10:45

    Household spending in Japan declines 3.1% year-on-year in January

    Japan's Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications released its inflation data on late Monday evening. Household spending in Japan fell 3.1% year-on-year in January, missing expectations of a 2.7% drop, after a 4.4% decline in December.

    The decline was mainly driven by drops in spending on housing, fuel, education, and clothing.

    Spending on housing plunged 16.1% year-on-year in January, spending on fuel slid 10.7%, spending on education dropped 7.6%, while spending on clothing declined 5.9%.

  • 10:30

    United Kingdom: Purchasing Manager Index Manufacturing , February 50.8 (forecast 52.2)

  • 10:23

    Reserve Bank of Australia keeps its interest rate unchanged at 2.00% in March

    The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) kept its interest rate unchanged at 2.00% on Tuesday. This decision was expected by analysts.

    The RBA Governor Glenn Stevens said that the board' decision was reasonable "for continued growth in the economy, with inflation close to target".

    He pointed out that further interest rate cut is possible.

    "Continued low inflation would provide scope for easier policy, should that be appropriate to lend support to demand," the RBA governor said.

    But Stevens noted that the next central bank's decision would depend on the incoming economic data.

    The RBA governor said that the global economy continued to grow.

    Stevens also said that the growth in the non-mining parts of the Australian economy strengthened in 2015, while the labour market improved.

    The RBA governor also said that consumer price inflation remained "quite low", adding that the monetary policy should be accommodative.

    Stevens noted that the Australian dollar was adjusting to the evolving economic outlook.

  • 10:14

    Japan’s unemployment rate declines to 3.2% in January

    Japan's Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications released its unemployment rate on late Monday evening. Unemployment rate in Japan fell to 3.2% in January from 3.3% in December. Analysts had expected the unemployment rate to remain unchanged.

    The number of unemployed persons fell by 200,000 in January to 2.11 million from a year ago.

    The number of employed persons rose by 900,000 in December to 63.99 million from a year ago.

  • 10:00

    Eurozone: Manufacturing PMI, February 51.2 (forecast 51)

  • 09:55

    Germany: Unemployment Rate s.a. , February 6.2% (forecast 6.2%)

  • 09:55

    Germany: Unemployment Change, February -10 (forecast -10)

  • 09:55

    Germany: Manufacturing PMI, February 50.5 (forecast 50.2)

  • 09:50

    France: Manufacturing PMI, February 50.2 (forecast 50.3)

  • 09:30

    Switzerland: Manufacturing PMI, February 51.6 (forecast 49.6)

  • 09:17

    Switzerland: Retail Sales (MoM), January -0.3%

  • 09:15

    Switzerland: Retail Sales Y/Y, January 0.2% (forecast -1.2%)

  • 08:59

    Option expiries for today's 10:00 ET NY cut

    USD/JPY: 112.90-113.00 (USD 397m) 113.35 (225m) 114.00 (205m) 114.45 (200m) EURUSD: 1.0680 (EUR 605m) 1.0800 (670m) 1.0850 (405m) 1.0887 (303m) 1.0900-10 (1.75bln) 1.0930 (382m) 1.1000 (1.32bln)

    AUD/USD: 0.7000 (AUD 201m) ) 0.7100 (469m) 0.7200 (370m)

    USD/CAD 1.3650 (USD 260m)

    NZD/USD 0.6390 (NZD 469m) 0.6600 (666m) 0.6650 (212m)

  • 08:25

    Options levels on Tuesday, March 1, 2016:

    EUR / USD

    Resistance levels (open interest**, contracts)

    $1.1107 (4167)

    $1.1020 (6524)

    $1.0952 (2571)

    Price at time of writing this review: $1.0875

    Support levels (open interest**, contracts):

    $1.0807 (3065)

    $1.0775 (6830)

    $1.0736 (3803)


    Comments:

    - Overall open interest on the CALL options with the expiration date March, 4 is 71709 contracts, with the maximum number of contracts with strike price $1,1000 (6524);

    - Overall open interest on the PUT options with the expiration date March, 4 is 89237 contracts, with the maximum number of contracts with strike price $1,0900 (8557);

    - The ratio of PUT/CALL was 1.24 versus 1.32 from the previous trading day according to data from February, 29


    GBP/USD

    Resistance levels (open interest**, contracts)

    $1.4201 (538)

    $1.4202 (434)

    $1.4004 (591)

    Price at time of writing this review: $1.3934

    Support levels (open interest**, contracts):

    $1.3893 (1726)

    $1.3796 (1429)

    $1.3698 (550)


    Comments:

    - Overall open interest on the CALL options with the expiration date March, 4 is 30848 contracts, with the maximum number of contracts with strike price $1,4350 (1966);

    - Overall open interest on the PUT options with the expiration date March, 4 is 32355 contracts, with the maximum number of contracts with strike price $1,4350 (2954);

    - The ratio of PUT/CALL was 1.05 versus 1.08 from the previous trading day according to data from February, 29


    * - The Chicago Mercantile Exchange bulletin (CME) is used for the calculation.

    ** - Open interest takes into account the total number of option contracts that are open at the moment.

  • 04:30

    Australia: Announcement of the RBA decision on the discount rate, 2% (forecast 2%)

  • 03:05

    Nikkei 225 15,974.11 -52.65 -0.33 %, Hang Seng 19,187.05 +75.12 +0.39 %, Shanghai Composite 2,671.2 -16.78 -0.62 %

  • 02:00

    China: Manufacturing PMI , February 49.0 (forecast 49.3)

  • 02:00

    China: Non-Manufacturing PMI, February 52.7

  • 01:30

    Australia: Current Account, bln, Quarter IV 21.1 (forecast -20)

  • 01:30

    Australia: Building Permits, m/m, January -7.5% (forecast -2%)

  • 01:02

    Commodities. Daily history for Feb 29’2016:

    (raw materials / closing price /% change)

    Oil 33.90 +0.44%

    Gold 1,239.30 +0.40%

  • 01:02

    Stocks. Daily history for Sep Feb 29’2016:

    (index / closing price / change items /% change)

    Nikkei 225 16,026.76 -161.65 -1.00 %

    Hang Seng 19,111.93 -252.22 -1.30 %

    Shanghai Composite 2,687.83 -79.38 -2.87 %

    FTSE 100 6,097.09 +1.08 +0.02 %

    CAC 40 4,353.55 +38.98 +0.90 %

    Xetra DAX 9,495.4 -17.90 -0.19 %

    S&P 500 1,932.23 -15.82 -0.81 %

    NASDAQ Composite 4,557.95 -32.52 -0.71 %

    Dow Jones 16,516.5 -123.47 -0.74 %

  • 01:01

    Currencies. Daily history for Feb 29’2016:

    (pare/closed(GMT +2)/change, %)

    EUR/USD $1,0872 -0,62%

    GBP/USD $1,3915 +0,37%

    USD/CHF Chf0,9982 +0,23%

    USD/JPY Y112,68 -1,12%

    EUR/JPY Y122,49 -1,75%

    GBP/JPY Y156,79 -0,73%

    AUD/USD $0,7140 +0,18%

    NZD/USD $0,6589 -0,61%

    USD/CAD C$1,3539 +0,20%

  • 00:30

    Japan: Household spending Y/Y, January -3.1% (forecast -2.7%)

  • 00:30

    Japan: Unemployment Rate, January 3.2% (forecast 3.3%)

  • 00:00

    Schedule for today, Tuesday, Mar 1’2016:

    (time / country / index / period / previous value / forecast)

    00:30 Australia Current Account, bln Quarter IV -18.1 -20

    00:30 Australia Building Permits, m/m January 9.2% -2%

    01:00 China Manufacturing PMI February 49.4 49.3

    01:00 China Non-Manufacturing PMI February 53.5

    01:35 Japan Manufacturing PMI (Finally) February 52.3

    01:45 China Markit/Caixin Manufacturing PMI February 48.4

    03:30 Australia Announcement of the RBA decision on the discount rate 2% 2%

    03:30 Australia RBA Rate Statement

    08:15 Switzerland Retail Sales (MoM) January 1.1%

    08:15 Switzerland Retail Sales Y/Y January -1.6%

    08:30 Switzerland Manufacturing PMI February 50 49.6

    08:50 France Manufacturing PMI (Finally) February 50 50.3

    08:55 Germany Unemployment Rate s.a. February 6.2% 6.2%

    08:55 Germany Unemployment Change February -20 -10

    08:55 Germany Manufacturing PMI (Finally) February 52.3 50.2

    09:00 Eurozone Manufacturing PMI (Finally) February 52.3 51

    09:30 United Kingdom Purchasing Manager Index Manufacturing February 52.9 52.2

    10:00 Eurozone Unemployment Rate January 10.4% 10.4%

    13:30 Canada GDP (m/m) December 0.3% 0.1%

    13:30 Canada GDP QoQ Quarter IV 0.6%

    13:30 Canada GDP (YoY) Quarter IV 2.3% 0.1%

    14:45 U.S. Manufacturing PMI (Finally) February 52.4 51

    15:00 U.S. Construction Spending, m/m January 0.1% 0.3%

    15:00 U.S. ISM Manufacturing February 48.2 48.6

    21:00 U.S. Total Vehicle Sales, mln February 17.58 17.7

    23:50 Japan Capital Spending Quarter IV

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