19 febrer 2018
After the strong correction registered during the first weeks of February, global stock markets closed last week on a positive note with stronger increases in Europe than in the U.S., where they remained relatively stable on Friday.
Evolution of the international financial markets and evaluation of the main events and economic indicators of the previous day session. Available in English.
After the strong correction registered during the first weeks of February, global stock markets closed last week on a positive note with stronger increases in Europe than in the U.S., where they remained relatively stable on Friday.
U.S. stocks rallied and yields on Treasuries nudged up, with the 10-year yield stabilizing marginally above 2.90 percent.
U.S. stock markets extended its rebound even as Treasury yields rose strongly with the release of January's CPI inflation.
Volatility levels remained elevated as stock and fixed-income markets were mixed across the globe.
U.S. stock markets ended their worst week in two years on a positive note, while European stocks also suffered losses in the last session of the week.
The sell-off in global stocks that briefly looked to have ended mid-week came back, tipping stock markets into renewed declines.
European stocks stabilized and closed higher, but U.S. stocks were unsteady and ended Wednesday's session lower.
U.S. stock markets showed signs of stabilization after several days of declines while in Europe they continued to registered strong decreases.
Volatility surged and global stock sell-off deepened yesterday with declines around 4% in the U.S. stock markets while in Europe decreases were more moderate. In sovereign bond markets, increased appetite for safe assets resulted into significant decreases in yields.