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Today's Picks
Fed's Schmid: Larger fiscal deficits will not cause inflation
Norway's largest oil field resumes production
Ukrainian troops use US Army tactical missile system to attack Russian territory for the first time
Putin signs decree allowing wider use of nuclear weapons
Xi Jinping meets with Scholz
Wu Qing: We welcome both long-term and short-term investments
China Securities Regulatory Commission: Crackdown on financial fraud, fines and confiscations amounted to 11 billion yuan in the first 10 months of this year
Large-cap broad-based equity ETFs cut fees
Market Review
On Tuesday, the US dollar index continued its downward trend, rising to 106.64 in the European session, and then gave up all the gains in the US session, and finally closed down 0.41% at 106.23. The benchmark 10-year US Treasury yield closed at 4.4020%; the two-year US Treasury yield, which is more sensitive to monetary policy, closed at 4.2910%.
Bitcoin pushed its all-time high to nearly $93,905.51 per coin.
As the escalating tensions between Russia and Ukraine triggered a rush for safe-haven assets, while investors awaited key signals on the Federal Reserve's interest rate plan, spot gold climbed for the second consecutive trading day, closing up 0.78% at $2,632.11 per ounce. Spot silver finally closed up 0.17% at $31.18 per ounce.
Signs of escalation in the situation between Russia and Ukraine made investors cautious, but the partial resumption of production at Norway's Johan Sverdrup oil field limited the rise in oil prices, and international oil prices rose slightly. WTI crude oil finally closed up 0.29% at $69.25 per barrel, while Brent crude oil closed up 0.12% at $73.26 per barrel.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed down 0.28%, the S&P 500 rose 0.4%, and the Nasdaq rose 1%. Nvidia (NVDA.O) rose 4.89%, Tesla (TSLA.O) rose 2%, and Trump Media Technology Group (DJT.O) fell 8.8%. The Nasdaq China Golden Dragon Index closed down 0.75%, Alibaba (BABA.N) fell 2.5%, and Xpeng Motors (XPEV.N) fell 3.8%.
Major European stock indices closed lower, with Germany's DAX30 index closing down 0.67%; Britain's FTSE 100 index closing down 0.13%; and Europe's STOXX 50 index closing down 0.82%.
The Hang Seng Index of Hong Kong stocks opened higher and then fell. In the afternoon, the Hang Seng Index turned down and then pulled up. As of the close, the Hang Seng Index in Hong Kong closed up 0.44%, and the Hang Seng Technology Index closed up 1.23%. In terms of individual stocks in the sector, rare earth, gold, automobile, lithium mining, and Chinese brokerage stocks have the highest gains. Among them, lithium mining stocks Ganfeng Lithium (01772.HK) rose by more than 13%, and Tianqi Lithium (09696.HK) rose by nearly 10%; among gold stocks, Zijin Mining (02899.HK) and Shandong Gold (01787.HK) closed up more than 4%. Large technology stocks rose and fell, Meituan (03690.HK) and Baidu (09888.HK) closed up more than 2%, and Xiaomi Group (01810.HK) was sluggish on the first day after the results, and fell more than 3% during the session, and closed down 1.74%.
The three major A-share indexes opened slightly higher and then fluctuated and weakened. In the afternoon, the index bottomed out and rebounded. As of the close, the Shanghai Composite Index rose 0.67%, the Shenzhen Component Index rose 1.9%, and the ChiNext Index rose 3%. On the market, the robot concept rose sharply, and many stocks such as Tosda, Keda Intelligent, and Dongfang Precision hit the daily limit. The lithium mining concept rose, and many stocks such as Ganfeng Lithium, Tianqi Lithium, and Shengxin Lithium Energy hit the daily limit. The controllable nuclear fusion concept moved abnormally, and Jiusheng Electric and Rongfa Nuclear Power hit the daily limit. Semiconductors, general machinery, IT equipment, public transportation and other sectors had the largest gains; telecommunications operations, construction, brewing, coal and other sectors had the largest declines.
International News
1. Fed's Schmid: Larger fiscal deficits will not trigger inflation because the Fed will prevent it, although it may mean higher interest rates.
2. The Bank of Japan will defend the rate hike in its policy review next month.
3. Statoil: Norway's largest oil field, Johan Sverdrup, has resumed production. The output of Johan Sverdrup will reach two-thirds of its normal capacity on Tuesday morning.
4. Putin signed a decree allowing the wider use of nuclear weapons; the Ukrainian army used the US Army's tactical missile system to attack Russian territory for the first time; Russia: The position is that nuclear war will not happen; the United States: There is no reason to adjust the nuclear posture due to Russia's decision.
5. International Atomic Energy Agency: Iran has agreed to stop producing enriched uranium close to weapons grade.
6. The Russian ruble exchange rate fell below 100.
7. Air pollution in Delhi, India has reached "hazardous" levels.
Domestic News
1. Xi Jinping meets with Scholz: The EU's additional tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles have attracted worldwide attention. China has always insisted on resolving differences through dialogue and consultation, and hopes that Germany will continue to play an important role in this regard.
2. National Development and Reform Commission: The economic performance in November and December is expected to continue its upward trend and strive to achieve the expected economic growth target for the whole year.
3. Large-scale broad-based stock ETFs have reduced fees, reducing costs for investors by approximately 5 billion each year.
4. China Securities Regulatory Commission: Cracking down on financial fraud, with fines and confiscations totaling 11 billion yuan in the first 10 months of this year.
5. Wu Qing: We welcome both long-term and short-term investments. What the market needs more now is to clear the bottlenecks for long-term funds to enter the market.
6. Guangzhou: The city will purchase existing commercial housing with an area of less than 90 square meters as affordable housing.
7. Shenzhen: It is clearly stated that the standards for ordinary housing and non-ordinary housing will be cancelled from December 1, 2024.
8. Shenzhen Intermediate People’s Court declared Royole Display Technology Co., Ltd. bankrupt.
Risk Warning
☆23:30, U.S. EIA crude oil inventory, Cushing crude oil inventory, and strategic petroleum reserve inventory for the week ending November 11;
☆At 00:00 the next day, Federal Reserve Board Governor Lisa Cook delivered a speech on the economic outlook and monetary policy;
☆At 01:15 the next day, Federal Reserve Board Governor Bowman delivered a speech.
Article forwarded from: Jinshi Data