11 mayo 2020
Investor sentiment improved in the last session of the week despite the release of April's U.S. employment report, which showed the largest job's loss since the Great Depression.
Evolution of the international financial markets and evaluation of the main events and economic indicators of the previous day session. Available in English.
Investor sentiment improved in the last session of the week despite the release of April's U.S. employment report, which showed the largest job's loss since the Great Depression.
As markets continue to struggle for direction, yesterday volatility declined and European and U.S. stock markets rose on the back of some positive earnings reports and as investors looked past weak economic releases.
Investors traded cautiously in yesterday's session. Uneasiness around U.S.-China relations and the release of economic indicators and forecasts affected by the COVID-19 sent global stocks lower while safe-haven currencies rose.
In a session in which the focus was expected to be the FOMC meeting and the Q1 2020 US GDP release, investors shifted their attention to the expectations of an effective COVID-19 treatment.
In yesterday's session, investor sentiment improved as some European countries and U.S. states moved toward gradually reopening their economies.
In the first session of the week, investor sentiment improved as covid-19 deaths slowed in Europe and some major economies moved shyly toward reopening.
In the last session of the week, investors traded cautiously in Europe amid dramatic economic sentiment data in Germany (Ifo sentiment fell to the lowest recorded level) and the absence of a clear EU-wide proposal to fund the recovery in Thursday’s European Council meeting.