Investors traded cautiously in yesterday's session as they wait for clearer signals that the U.S. and China will close the first phase of a trade deal.
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With U.S. markets closed for Thanksgiving Day, elsewhere investors traded cautiously as they eyed China's reaction to Donald Trump's signing two bills supporting Hong Kong's protesters.
In the last session of the week, investors traded with caution amid the U.S. - China tensions.
Investor sentiment weakened as Donald Trump lowered the odds for signing a phase-one trade deal with China before this year-end.
Stocks rose moderately across advanced and emerging economies ahead of the Fed's meeting and as investors continue to eye U.S.-China negotiations.
Investors traded in a risk-on mood in a session dominated by news that the U.S. and China closed their phase-one deal and by the ECB's monetary policy meeting.
In the last session of the week, financial markets echoed the agreement reached by the U.S. and China in the phase-one trade deal and the results of the general election in the UK.
Investors traded cautiously ahead of today's signature of the U.S.-China phase-one trade deal and the release of further details on the agreement.
Markets underwent a mixed session as the U.S. and China signed their phase-one trade deal. U.S. stocks advanced mildly while most AE and EM indices declined moderately.
Investors traded yesterday with a risk-on mood, despite the continuing tensions between China and the US, fueled by the gradual reopening of economies and amid optimism on the economic recovery.
Despite the release of better-than-expected economic data in Germany and in the UK, investors traded with a risk-off mood after Monday’s IMF downward growth revision and amid concerns that the virus outbreak in China could disrupt consumer spending.
Markets started the week on a risk-off mood, driven by concerns over the economic impact of the coronavirus outbreak in China.
In yesterday's session, investor sentiment continued to recover for the year-lows, supported by positive economic releases and waning fears of the financial fallout from a virus out of China.
Yesterday China announced that it would halve tariffs on $75 billion of U.S. products as agreed in the trade deal's Phase one.
Investors started the week in a mixed mood and stocks declined across most advanced and emerging economies but not in China nor in the U.S
Investors ended the week with a risk-off session, triggered by concerns about the economic impact of the coronavirus (i.e. a spike in infections outside China) and a negative surprise in U.S. sentiment indicators.
Markets tumbled amid concerns that the coronavirus could spread more widely and take a larger toll on economic activity outside China.
Concerns about the spread and the economic impact of the coronavirus rattled markets for a second day in a row (following a rapid increase in cases in countries other than China).
Concerns over the spread of the coronavirus outside China rattled markets again.
In yesterday's session, investor sentiment worsened amid weak economic data releases and mounting trade tensions between the US and China.