Stocks stabilise; investor nerves fray ahead of Nvidia earnings, jobs data

By Tom Westbrook and Amanda Cooper

SINGAPORE/LONDON (Reuters) -Global shares steadied on Wednesday, after another selloff driven by nerves over AI valuations, although the mood was cautious ahead of what could be make-or-break earnings from chip titan Nvidia and U.S. jobs data this week. 

The tech-heavy Nasdaq fell 1.2% overnight, marking a second straight daily decline. Worries about lofty valuations have knocked it more than 6% below late October’s record peak. Heading towards the open, S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq 100 futures were up 0.3-0.4%,  having climbed steadily throughout the European morning. 

The STOXX 600 reversed early losses to rise 0.1%, but is still down 4% from record highs reached less than a week ago.

MSCI’s All-World index was down 0.1%, easing for a fifth straight session in its longest stretch of daily losses since August.

EYES ON NVIDIA

Nvidia, which sells the graphics processing units underpinning artificial intelligence, has been at the heart of a rally that has carried stock markets around the world to all-time highs and lifted any stock with even tangential links to AI.

It reports its earnings after the market close in the U.S. and is expected to deliver a 56% jump in its fiscal August-October quarter revenue to $54.92 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.    

“It looks like Nvidia’s stock price has been priced for perfection, so GPU demand must continue to grow strongly for many more years for the stock to stay up,” said Wong Kok Hoi, founder and CEO of APS Asset Management in Singapore.

Nvidia shares were up around 1% in the U.S. pre-market. The company’s results could set the tone for risk sentiment for the near term, and not just in equities.

“Given the current positive correlation between equities and the dollar (which reflects perhaps the renewed concerns over a tech/AI-specific correction hitting the broader U.S. economy) a bad earnings report this evening could drive the dollar weaker,” MUFG strategist Lee Hardman said, adding that the focus would likely then rapidly pivot to Thursday’s delayed U.S. employment data.

FED OUTLOOK

The dollar has fallen by 8.1% this year, heading for its worst performance against a basket of currencies since 2017.  Year-to-date losses topped more than 10% in October, but the dollar has been steadily clawing higher since then, as uncertainty over the economic outlook and persistent inflation have tempered expectations for rate cuts and the stock market bull run has started to stall.

The Japanese yen, which hit its weakest since late January against the dollar at 156, has given up almost all of this year’s gains against the dollar and prompted officials in Tokyo to warn about the prospect of intervention. 

Investors also worry that U.S. President Donald Trump’s falling approval rating could drive fiscal spending and possibly stoke inflation, which has kept safe-haven U.S. Treasuries in check. The benchmark 10-year note was steady at 4.12%, having barely moved so far this month.

Markets are pricing about a 42% chance of a 25-basis point Federal Reserve rate cut in December, something that was priced as a near certainty a month ago.

BITCOIN BOUNCES BACK FROM BELOW $90,000

Meanwhile bitcoin has recovered slightly from Tuesday’s seven-month lows to trade at $91,400, but was still nearly 30% below October’s record high.

“BTC has erased this year’s gains and then some, meaning anybody who acquired in the past 10 months is underwater,” said Justin d’Anethan, head of research at Arctic Digital, a crypto investment and advisory firm.

In commodities, gold, which scaled record highs alongside stocks in October, has also fallen. It was last up 1.2% at $4,115 an ounce, while Brent crude futures fell 2% to $63.59 a barrel.

(Additional reporting by Tom Westbrook in Singapore; Editing by Sonali Paul, Alex Richardson and Chizu Nomiyama )

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