By Wayne Cole and Harry Robertson
SYDNEY/LONDON, July 6 (Reuters) – U.S. futures ticked higher and European stocks traded near record highs on Monday as the potential for increased energy supplies pulled down oil prices, while investors awaited a crucial āearnings season for the AI sector.
While there were no new developments in the fractious U.S.-Iran peace talks, ships are passing āthrough the Strait of Hormuz, with 160 vessels reported transiting from Monday to Saturday last week.
OPEC+ also agreed to a further increase in output targets by 188,000 barrels āper day from August. Brent crude fell 0.2% to near four-month lows at $71.95 a barrel.
Futures for the S&P 500 climbed 0.5% after Friday’s U.S. holiday break, while Nasdaq futures rose 1.1%. Europe’s STOXX 600 slipped 0.3% after touching a record high earlier in the session.
The U.S. benchmark index rallied 1.8% last week, while STOXX 600 climbed 2.7% as traders reduced their bets on rate hikes as energy prices cooled, although some pockets of āthe tech sector – particularly chipmakers – struggled.
“Lower oil prices ā should … support the growth-sensitive sectors and countries which have underperformed during the last three months,” said Mohit Kumar, chief European economist at Jefferies.
“While we remain long U.S. tech, we have added to Asia and growth ā sensitive sectors in recent weeks.”
Investors will be watching closely for how artificial intelligence-related companies are faring amid some fears about a bubble in the upcoming earnings season.
Delta Air Lines and PepsiCo are the big U.S. names reporting this week, though Samsung Electronics is set to make a splash on Tuesday āas analysts āexpect an 18-fold increase in profits.
South Korea’s hot market cooled a little ālast week but is still up 90% for the āyear so far as AI demand and tight supplies boost chip prices. The KOSPI index eased 0.5% on Monday, while Japan’s Nikkei was flat.
South Korean chipmaker SK Hynix will launch a U.S. listing on Monday to raise about $28 billion, according to regulatory filings, in a further test of the AI wave’s strength.
In currency markets, the dollar index rose 0.2% to 101.08 after dipping in the wake of Thursday’s weaker-than-expected June U.S. payrolls report.
The euro was down 0.1% at $1.142, just above the recent 13-month low of $1.133.
The dollar firmed 0.6% to 162.28 yen , not far from ā40-year peaks of 162.84 as speculators test Japanese authorities’ resolve on intervention.
U.S. āPresident Donald Trump will attend a NATO meeting in Turkey this week, while the ādata calendar kicks off with the U.S. ISM Services survey ālater on Monday.
A clutch of central bankers are speaking at a European central banking conference on Monday, including āFederal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller, while ECB President Christine āLagarde is also due to speak āin Paris. Minutes from the Fed’s latest meeting are due on Wednesday.
“Even if the Fed stays on hold, a still-stretched manufacturing sector, the threat of higher food costs thanks to El NiƱo, and weaker local currencies are keeping monetary officials on the ādefensive,” said Frederic Neumann, chief Asia economist at āHSBC.
He expects hikes in New Zealand and South Korea this month, with Indonesia in play as well.
In commodity markets, āgold was 0.5% lower at $4,150 an ounce, having bounced 2% last week. [GOL/]
(Reporting by Wayne Cole in Sydney and Harry āRobertson in London; Editing by Jacqueline Wong, Stephen Coates and Thomas Derpinghaus)
