European Stock Markets
European stocks retreated on Wednesday, shrugging off gains in the Asia
session as traders brace for a busy second half of the week.
The
region’s bonds advanced, Treasuries were flat and the dollar extended
gains before another round of U.S. debt sales and the release of minutes
from the latest Fed meeting.
Almost every sector of the Stoxx Europe 600 Index fell, with the gauge
tracking losses in the U.S. on Tuesday rather than the more positive
mood in Asia. Stocks rose in Hong Kong, cementing a rebound from one of
the worst sell-offs in years at the start of the month.
S&P 500
Index futures edged lower. Benchmark Treasury yields steadied, but
remain near recent highs as the U.S. government continues its a big week for debt auctions.
The Treasury’s $258 billion of auctions slated for this week comes
amid surging rates that gave impetus to one of the steepest equity
sell-offs in years two weeks ago.
While investors seem to have adjusted
to 10-year yields at a four-year high for now, the deluge of supply
could push them higher, weakening the case for owning stocks at elevated
valuations.
Investor attention will also be on minutes from the Federal
Reserve’s most recent meeting, due Wednesday in New York. On Thursday
they will get to parse minutes from the last European Central Bank
gathering.
Elsewhere, oil
in New York dropped toward $61 a barrel ahead of U.S. government data
that’s forecast to show crude inventories gained for a fourth week.
Bitcoin slipped, but pared its decline to hover above $11,000.

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