Item 1 of 2 Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., December 1, 2025. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
- Fed expected to cut rates amid weak economic data
- US dollar index is set to snap nine-session losing streak
- Japanese stocks lead gains, Nikkei up 2%
NEW YORK/LONDON, Dec 4 (Reuters) – Global shares and the dollar on Thursday were mostly higher as traders await a Fed interest rate cut.
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“After a 5% pullback in late November, stocks have rebounded and are now trading at the pre-pullback levels and near all-time highs,” said Michael Farr, chief executive of investment advisory firm Farr, Miller & Washington in Washington.
“If they cut rates by a quarter of a point and then take a pause – which every Fed speaker has indicated, markets might be disappointed in the messaging. If they don’t cut and say we’re going to wait until the next meeting, markets will be disappointed there too,” Farr said.
Fed funds futures are pricing a near 90% chance of a quarter-point cut at the end of the Fed’s next meeting on December 10, compared with an 83.4% chance a week ago, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool.
The dollar index , which tracks the U.S. currency’s performance against six others, was up slightly by 0.17% on the day, easing earlier losses and poised to end nine straight sessions of declines.
Oil prices rose, with Brent crude futures adding 0.94% to settle at $63.26 while U.S. crude futures gained, settling up 1.22% at $59.67.
US 10-YEAR TREASURY BOND YIELD UP
“I think there’s purposeful timing by the Trump administration to announce the president’s selection of a new Fed chairman that will be seen – correctly or not – as being more dovish around this meeting to appear as an antidote to the messaging,” Farr said.
In Japan, the government’s debt sale drew the strongest demand in more than six years, which helped soothe investor nerves about the country’s long-term finances that have stoked similar worries about other economies.
The dollar was last down 0.08% at 155.11 against the yen , which is heading for its largest weekly gain against the U.S. currency in over two months.
Meanwhile, the yuan softened a touch, leaving the dollar up 0.21% at 7.071 yuan in offshore trading in Hong Kong . The Chinese currency hit its strongest level against the dollar in more than a year on Wednesday.
Reporting by Chibuike Oguh in New York and Gregor Stuart Hunter; Editing by Ed Osmond and Lisa Shumaker
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