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PESTILENCE AND WILDFIRES (0730 GMT)
Chinese imports and exports both undershot expectations last
month, data showed on the weekend, impacted in part by the
COVID-19 resurgence across the country and the rest of Asia.
Those outbreaks have also caused flight cancellations, warnings
by 46 cities against travel, and limits on public transport in
144 of the worst-hit areas in China.
It is a sign of the threat the Delta variant poses to
economic recovery in the developed world, especially the United
States where caseloads are rising fast in some states.
Friday's forecast-beating U.S. jobs data is keeping the
dollar at four-month highs and 10-year Treasury yields above
1.3%. Gold extended losses too, falling as much as 4% at one
point. But the COVID worries drove oil prices down 2.4%, adding
to last week's 6% loss.
And Wall Street, which notched a record close on Friday, is
tipped to open weaker as are European stocks following five
consecutive all-time peaks hit last week. Asia's COVID surge is
also hitting some shares -- Adidas for instance is tipped to
open 1% lower due to a hit to supply chains in Vietnam.
But Chinese stock markets rose, buoyed perhaps by hopes of
more government support for the economy. Also on the stimulus
front, the U.S. Senate is moving slowly towards passing a $1
trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill.
There are also corporate stories aplenty.
In M&A, private equity firm CD&R has been given more time to
up its bid for Morrisons, Germany's Delivery Hero has taken a
5.09% stake in food delivery rival Deliveroo and Swedish auto
parts maker Veoneer is to start talks with chipmaker
Qualcomm whose $4.6 billion offer topped a rival bid by
Magna.
Philip Morris has upped its bid for British drugmaker
Vectura.
Finally, as wildfires ravage Turkey, Greece and the United
States, expect a stark warning from the United Nations climate
change panel on how quickly the planet is warming.
Key developments that should provide more direction to markets
on Monday:
-China's factory gate inflation in July rose at a faster clip
from the previous month
-Bank of England deputy governor Ben Broadbent speaks
-Federal Reserve speakers: Atlanta Fed's Rafael Bostic, Richmond
Fed's Thomas Barkin
-German trade balance
-U.S. JOLTS jobs opening
-U.S. earnings: Tyson Foods, AMC
(Sujata Rao)
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EUROPEAN SHARES SEEN HIT BY COMMODITY TUMBLE (0630 GMT)
A sharp fall in gold and oil prices hit European futures,
which are pointing to a lower opening for bourses across the
region, after the STOXX 600 reached five consecutive record
highs last week.
Investors are also still assessing whether Friday's strong
U.S. payrolls report would take the Fed a step nearer to winding
back its stimulus, while figures for July CPI due this week
expected to confirm inflation has peaked.
The Fed will certainly be in focus this week, with four
officials speaking offering enough grist for markets looking for
clues on the timing of tapering.
(Joice Alves)
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