
Shares slip as investors look to earnings, tariff talks
The Euro STOXX 600 index extended losses during morning trading and was last down 0.6%, with bourses in Germany and France losing 1.1% and 0.8% respectively.
Among the big decliners were chemical stocks which shed 2% as Dulux paint maker Akzo Nobel lost 5.4% after lowering its core profit outlook for 2025. Earnings from firms including SAP and UniCredit were also in focus.
Investors were also following tariff talks ahead of Washington's August 1 deadline, with the European Union exploring a broader set of possible countermeasures against the U.S. as hopes for an acceptable agreement fade.
The euro was steady at $1.1689 after rising 0.5% on Monday, though still away from the near four-year high hit at the start of the month.
The single currency is up 13% this year as investors looked for alternatives to U.S. assets bruised by tariff uncertainties. Its performance is closely monitored for its impact on profits in the euro zone's export-reliant economy.
"The euro's ability to maintain preference over the dollar amid tariff tensions will depend on the extent of any escalation and whether the EU emerges as a relative loser while other countries secure significant deals with the U.S.," ING analysts wrote in a note to clients.
Wall Street futures were marginally down. The benchmark S&P 500 and the Nasdaq closed at record highs on Monday.
Investors await results this week from Wall Street giants Alphabet and Tesla, as well as European heavyweights LVMH and Roche, as uncertainty over tariffs clouds the outlook.
Earlier, Asian share markets drifted lower after scaling a near four-year peak.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan hit its highest since October 2021 but finished down 0.4%. The index is up nearly 16% this year.
Japanese markets returned after a holiday on Monday following the weekend's election where the ruling coalition suffered a defeat in upper house elections, although Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba vowed to remain in his post.
The yen rallied 1% on Monday, recouping some of the losses from past weeks and was flat at 147.43 per dollar.
FED INDEPENDENCE
The dollar index, which gauges the unit against six other key currencies, was also flat at 97.849.
Rumblings around the Federal Reserve's independence and whether U.S. President Donald Trump will fire Fed Chair Jerome Powell have kept investors on tenterhooks in recent weeks.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Monday the entire Federal Reserve needed to be examined as an institution and whether it had been successful.
The Fed is widely expected to hold rates steady in its July meeting but might lower rates later in the year. Market focus will be squarely on Powell's impending speech on Tuesday for clues about when the Fed might ease policy.
Brent crude futures fell 0.9% to $68.56 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude slipped by the same amount to $66.59 per barrel. (Reporting by Tom Wilson in London and Ankur Banerjee in Singapore. Editing by Mark Potter and Bernadette Baum)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Zawya
a day ago
- Zawya
London hosts the Gulf-British Arbitration Forum with participation of prominent international experts
Dr. Kamal Al-Hamad, Secretary-General of the Gulf Cooperation Council Commercial Arbitration Centre (GCCCAC), inaugurated the Gulf-British Arbitration Forum held at the Arab-British Chamber of Commerce in the UK capital, London. The forum attracted significant attention, with over 100 distinguished leaders from the Gulf, Arab countries, and the United Kingdom, alongside a number of international legal, judicial, and commercial arbitration experts. The forum addressed several key topics, most notably international commercial arbitration, and introduced the upcoming Second Gulf Law and Arbitration Week, scheduled to be held in the Kingdom of Bahrain in January next year. The event served as a platform for knowledge exchange and the strengthening of legal cooperation among relevant institutions. Mr. Abdullah Al-Omair, Director General of International Agreements at the Saudi Ministry of Investment, delivered a keynote presentation highlighting the legal environment for investment in Saudi Arabia in light of the Ministry's strategies and Vision 2030. The audience praised the Kingdom's achievements in attracting foreign investment and fostering investor confidence. A delegation from the Supreme Judiciary Council of Qatar also participated, presenting the status of commercial courts and investment-related judicial structures in Qatar, with a particular focus on initiatives supporting and empowering women in the legal sector as part of the country's judicial system. On the sidelines of the forum, Dr. Kamal Al-Hamad held a series of coordination meetings with several UK arbitration institutions, accompanied by members of the GCCCAC Advisory Committee. These meetings included discussions on exchanging rosters of arbitrators and experts, as well as exploring cooperation mechanisms for training and certifying legal arbitrators and specialists. These visits are part of a broader series of international Gulf forums organized by the GCCCAC, aimed at enhancing engagement and experience exchange with leading legal and arbitration bodies worldwide. The series began in the United States in May, followed by the UK forum, and will continue in Paris this September, where meetings are scheduled with the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) and Sorbonne University, under the patronage of the Arab-French Chamber of Commerce. The forum concluded with a special tribute to Queen Mary University of London, one of the UK's prestigious academic institutions. Dr. Peter Cameron, Professor of Law at the university, delivered a speech discussing specialized academic programs in legal training and the importance of preparing legal professionals to meet the evolving demands of international arbitration. It is worth noting that the Gulf Cooperation Council Commercial Arbitration Centre is an international regional arbitration body with legal personality, established by a resolution of the GCC heads of state during the 14th GCC Summit in Riyadh in 1993. The centre's operational framework was approved by all GCC Council of Ministers, with the aim of promoting arbitration as an independent system for resolving commercial and investment disputes. The Centre also works to train and certify arbitrators, experts, and case managers across various specialties through high-quality accreditation programs, thereby fostering a culture of justice and fairness in arbitration across the Gulf region.


Crypto Insight
3 days ago
- Crypto Insight
CoinShares secures French MiCA license, cementing EU presence
CoinShares, a major European cryptocurrency investment firm, has secured a license under the local regulatory framework, Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA). CoinShares received the MiCA license through its French subsidiary, CoinShares Asset Management, the company announced on Wednesday. With the license, CoinShares became the 'first continental European regulated asset management company' to be qualified under MiCA, the announcement noted. CoinShares, a major provider of crypto exchange-traded products (ETPs) in Europe, has also been expanding its US presence since acquiring Valkyrie Funds last year. Triple license mix Following the new license acquisition, CoinShares now holds three regulatory licenses in Europe, including MiCA, the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID) license and the Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive (AIFM) license. CoinShares said it's the only continental European asset manager with this triple license, allowing it to offer services across all EU asset classes. CoinShares' MiCA license, issued by the French Autorité des Marchés Financiers (AMF) on Thursday, allows the company to offer portfolio management and advice on crypto assets in the EU. The MiFID license allows it to do the same for traditional financial instruments. The AIFM license authorizes CoinShares to provide services in alternative fund management and delegated management under the EU's Undertakings for Collective Investment in Transferable Securities Directive (UCITS). A milestone for entire EU industry According to CoinShares co-founder and CEO Jean-Marie Mognetti, the MiCA license acquisition marks a major milestone not only for CoinShares, but for the entire crypto industry in Europe. 'For too long, asset managers operating in crypto have been confined to partial or improvised regulatory frameworks,' Mognetti noted, adding that MiCA has brought a 'clear, harmonised structure across the EU.' CoinShares stressed that its MiCA license enables it to provide services across several EU jurisdictions, with operations currently passported in France, Germany, Cyprus, Ireland, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta and the Netherlands. The announcement noted the possibility of extending the authorization across all EU member states. CoinShares makes moves in the US Apart from cementing its position as a key industry leader in the EU, CoinShares has also been actively working to compete with peers in the US market after officially entering the market in 2023. Since introducing the CoinShares Bitcoin and Ether ETF (BTF) — a futures ETF tracking the price of Bitcoin and Ether — in the US in October 2021, CoinShares has launched three more crypto funds in the market. The list of CoinShares ETFs currently offered in the US. Source: CoinShares The other funds include the CoinShares Bitcoin Mining ETF (WGMI) launched in February 2022, the spot Bitcoin ETF, CoinShares Bitcoin ETF (BRRR), and the Bitcoin Futures Leveraged ETF (BTFX), launched in January 2024 and February 2024, respectively. Following last year's acquisition of Valkyrie Funds, CoinShares has also been actively applying for other ETF products in the US, including a potential spot XRP (XRP) ETF. Source:


Zawya
3 days ago
- Zawya
U.S. copper hits record high, expanding premium over the LME benchmark
U.S. copper futures hit a record high on Thursday, expanding their premium against the global benchmark with just over a week left until the planned date for the U.S. import tariff on the metal. The most active COMEX copper futures rose 1.2% to $5.888 a lb after hitting a peak of $5.959, while the three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange fell 0.2% to $9,910 a metric ton in official open-outcry trading. The premium of COMEX over LME copper expanded to 31% from 29% on Wednesday. The premium remained below the 50% import tariff planned by President Donald Trump as the market was waiting for confirmation of the August 1 deadline and a list of the copper products to which the levy would apply. "We are cautious of copper's current upward momentum. Any shift in the Trump's tariff policy – whether there are any exemptions or the rate itself is toned down – could see the COMEX premium falling," said ING commodities analyst Ewa Manthey. Copper stocks in the COMEX-owned warehouses jumped 163% over the last four months, but inflows to them have been slowing down in recent days. This trend is likely to persist, improving availability of copper outside the U.S. and keeping the global copper prices under pressure, Manthey said. Apart from the approaching August 1 deadline for the U.S. copper import tariffs, the metals market focus is on China-U.S. trade talks due in Sweden next week, U.S. trade talks with other countries, and Washington's ongoing investigation into potential import tariffs for some critical minerals. Among other LME metals, tin was steady at $34,845 a ton in official activity after touching $35,100, for its highest since April 7, earlier in the session. Aluminium lost 0.1% to $2,648 a ton, while zinc fell 0.3% to $2,853. Both hit a four-month high earlier in the session. Lead and nickel eased 0.2% to $2,028 and $15,540, respectively. (Reporting by Polina Devitt; Editing by Leroy Leo)