Russian floors will look to build on Monday’s steady upward headway, as the MICEX added 1.16 points, closing at 1,417.34 and the dollar-based RTS index gained 0.35 percent, closing at 1,379.88.
Gazprom, the world’s largest oil extractor, and Russia’s top
energy company, could face a challenging day on Russian trading
floors, as they missed Forbes’ ‘Top 50 Company’ list, tumbling to
57th place.
Crude oil, Russia’s top export earner, is down. WTI fell 0.28
percent to $106.93 per barrel and Brent lost 0.22 percent and is
trading at $108.18 per barrel.
Lower crude prices weakened the ruble against the dollar, which
is down 0.1 percent at 32.29, retreating from its 1.0 percent
gain in the previous week.
At the close of US trading, the Dow Jones Industrial Average
climbed 0.15 percent, the S&P 500 fell 0.19 percent, and the
NASDAQ dipped 0.59 percent. The Dow was propelled by Travelers
Co., a property insurer, which reported a second-quarter profit
increase of 85 percent.
European floors have a lot of economic indicators to watch today.
The eurozone will release manufacturing and service sector data,
the UK will release industrial order expectations, and Germany
and France will produce individual economic reports.
Europe’s benchmark indexes are struggling. Germany’s DAX rose for
the first time in three days, but has dipped 0.2 percent to
8,314.23. The Euro Stoxx 50 is trading down 0.09 percent at
2,722.90, and France’s CAC is down 0.43 percent at 3,923.09.
Conversely, London’s FTSE 50 is up 0.03 percent, 5.03 points up
from previous close.
Most Asian stocks fell Wednesday on disappointing manufacturing
data from China, the world’s second-largest economy.
Japan’s Nikkei fell 0.58 percent and is now down 0.32 percent at
14,731.24. The Shanghai Composite index slid 0.92 percent
Australia’s ASX 200 continues its strong July session, and is up
0.28 percent at 5,031.10. Consumer price inflation rose
less-than-expected in the last quarter to 0.4 percent, and not
the predicted 0.5 percent. Year-on-year, the CPI is 2.4 percent,
which falls in line with the central bank’s target between 2 and
3 percent.