Today’s Stock Exchanges, February 9th. Markets in no particular order, harsh comments from the Fed weigh. Credit Susse, customers’ money drain

Today's Stock Exchanges, February 9th.  Markets in no particular order, harsh comments from the Fed weigh. Credit Susse, customers' money drain

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MILAN – A day in no particular order for stock markets in the aftermath of the negative closure on Wall Street, which was weighed down by some comments from Fed bankers who took on hawkish tones and led investors to question their expectations on the peak in taxi. It is no coincidence that the S&P500 lost more than 1% and the Nasdaq 1.8%. Futures on Europe and the US are up slightly today, while Asia has moved in fits and starts. Tokyo closed unchanged, losing 0.08%.

Among the individual business cases, focus on Credit Suisse: the Swiss bank recorded record outflows of money from customers in the fourth quarter of 2022, with a loss beyond expectations of 1.5 billion dollars in the period and outflows of 120 billion. The entire year closed in the red for over 7 billion, a record since the great financial crisis, and also for 2023 – despite the capital increase and the maxi-slimming plan – a substantial loss is expected.

Slight appreciation in oil

Oil prices slightly up on Asian markets. Currently contracts on WTI are being sold at 78.50 dollars a barrel, up by 0.04%, while those on Brent change hands at 85.26 dollars (+0.09%).

Positive futures for Europe and Wall Street

A positive start is expected for European stocks with futures on the Frankfurt Dax up +0.53%, those on the London FTSE 100 up +0.25% while futures on the Euro Stoxx 50 rise by 0.43% .

There are also upward signs for the USA with contracts on the Dow Jones which mark +0.29%, those on the S&P +0.40% while on the Nasdaq they rise by +0.31%.

Tokyo closes slowly

The Tokyo Stock Exchange ends the session slightly down, following the contraction of Wall Street and the Nasdaq’s technological listing, with investors anticipating new monetary tightening by the US Federal Reserve, following the recent comments by numerous US central bank officials . The reference Nikkei list marks a slightly negative change of 0.08% to 27,584.35. On the currency front, the yen is stable against the dollar, at 131.20 and 140.90 against the euro.

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