STOXX Europe 600 up 0.1%
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Spanish inflation cools in May
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Impact of US debt deal questioned
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U.S. stock futures edge up
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COPPER: AN IMPROVING RISK-REWARD (0945 GMT)
The recent sell-off in copper has created an improving risk-reward, analysts say, after a decline that has seen the red metal fall 11% since mid-April and more than 15% from its year-to-date high.
Morgan Stanley notes there have been several bearish factors behind the decline: slowing growth in China, weak euro area PMIs and risks related to the debt ceiling.
"We can argue there has been good reason for the sell-off in copper, even if it played out sooner than we expected," Morgan Stanley analysts write.
"A lot of the price action from here probably depends on the macro, but if the US debt ceiling is resolved, and China stimulus comes through as our economists expect over summer, the risk-reward for copper could start to look better on any pullbacks."
UBS analysts share that view.
"Following a detailed review of supply & demand, we believe the copper market is closer to a fundamental inflection point," UBS says.
The Swiss bank says that prices could test theoretic support levels in the near-term - at ~$3.20/lb for CME copper and $7,000/t for LME copper - if weak physical signals deteriorate further as supply lifts, or risk aversion increases.
However, they do not see a protracted period of oversupply driving prices into the cost curve for an extended period.
"Near-term physical market signals are weak and spec positioning has shifted from net long to neutral/short," UBS writes.
"We see a modest surplus in 2023 but expect a tighter market in 2024 and believe the prospect of copper moving into a more protracted deficit from 2025 increases the risk of violent price upside in the next 2-3 years."
But with little conviction that the bottom of the cycle has been reached yet, UBS remains generally cautious on copper equities.
The Swiss bank has 'buy' ratings on Zijin and CMOC , 'neutral' ratings on Freeport-McMoRan, Antofagasta, Lundin Mining, Boliden, KGHM Polska Miedz and Sandfire Resources, and a 'sell' rating on Southern Copper.
(Samuel Indyk)
STOXX LACKS CONVICTION (0815 GMT)
There was not huge conviction at the European open on Tuesday as investors awaited for the U.S. debt ceiling deal to make its way through Congress, just as caution grew that ensuing U.S. debt issuance would suck liquidity from the market.
The STOXX Europe 600 was last little changed as gains across financials and the IT sectors offset weakness in consumer staples and energy. Spain's IBEX stood out, up 0.5%, after snap elections were called on Monday and inflation slowed to 3.2% in May.
Here's your snapshot with sectoral weights on the STOXX.
EUROPEAN FUTURES EDGE UP (0643 GMT)
European shares looked set to open cautiously higher on Tuesday as investors awaited Congress approval of a deal that will avoid a U.S. default but will also likely lead to hundreds of billions in bond issuance, draining liquidity out of markets.
EuroSTOXX50 futures rose 0.2% and FTSE futures steadied, as investors in Britain and America return to their desks after a long weekend. Futures on the S&P 500 benchmark added 0.3%.
On the corporate front, newsflow was thin so far.
India has filed a graft case against Britain's BAE Systems and Rolls-Royce for "criminal conspiracy" in the procurement and manufacturing of 123 advanced jet trainers, a federal police document showed.
In Italy, eyes were on Monte dei Paschi after its CEO said the lender "can and must" join forces with domestic peers to build a "third pole" in the country's banking sector.
Real estate firm Aroundtown and baked goods group Aryzta were in focus following results. Finally in M&A, machine tools makers Tornos and Starrag said they were looking into a possible merger deal.
(Danilo Masoni)
TOO SOON TO DRINK TO THE US DEBT DEAL (0556 GMT)
U.S. and UK markets return from their long weekend on Tuesday with a touch of ambivalence, happy that the weekend resulted in a U.S. debt ceiling agreement and yet anxious about how the deal will fare in congress.
More detail and clarity are expected around the tentative agreement in Washington to suspend the $31.4 trillion federal debt ceiling until January 2025 in exchange for caps on spending and cuts in government programmes. Even before celebrations could begin, a handful of hard-right Republican lawmakers have said they will oppose it.
That means the bipartisan 99-page bill, still subject to approval in both houses of congress, could face a rocky path before the U.S. runs out of money next week.
Meanwhile, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez surprised everyone, even people within his own government, by taking "personal responsibility" for Sunday's crippling defeat in a regional election and calling for a snap election next week.
It seemed to be an attempt to wrong-foot his conservative opponents and give his flagging Socialist party the best chance of retaining power before its support weakens further.
In the first trades in U.S. debt markets since the debt ceiling deal, longer-term Treasuries rallied in Asia, driving benchmark 10-year yields down 6 basis points to 3.76%.
But bid-offer spreads were wide in Asia, as investors balanced their nerves over the deal's passage, the prospect of Treasury potentially issuing more than $1 trillion in bills in the coming months to replenish its coffers, and suspicion that the Fed will have to raise rates further.
Asian stocks are up, and futures indicate mild gains for stocks in Europe and the United States, too. The dollar is staying firm around its strongest level in more than two months against a basket of major currencies.
Besides the debt deal, there is little else on investors' minds. Spain kicks off a week of European inflation readings, all of which should show some moderation in prices and yet not enough to change expectations for more policy tightening.
Key developments that could influence markets on Tuesday:
Speakers: Richmond Fed President Barkin (FOMC non-voter), Representatives from SWFs and the SWF industry gather in London for the Global Wealth Conference.
Data: U.S. Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index, EU Consumer Confidence, U.S. House Price Indices, Dallas Fed Manufacturing Activity (May), Sweden Q1 GDP, Switzerland Q1 GDP.
Earnings : Manchester United, Hewlett-Packard
(Vidya Ranganathan)