The Commerce Department’s snapshot of gross domestic product due on Thursday is expected to show the U.S. economy grew at a trend rate of 1.8% in second-quarter, almost a full point drop in core inflation to 4% and the housing slump nearing an end.
The stock market remains buoyed near highs for the year.
Aided by upbeat Boeing results, the Dow Jones blue chip index clocked 13 straight daily gains on Wednesday for the first time since 1987 and S&P500 futures are up again ahead of today’s bell. The VIX volatility gauge slipped below 13 for the first time this month.
But Meta Platforms stole the show overnight, with its stock soaring 7% after the digital giant reported a strong rise in advertising revenue – while topping Wall Street financial targets and third-quarter revenue guidance.
Global stocks hit their highest since April last year on Thursday, with European stocks up more than 1% ahead of the ECB decision.
While the ECB is also expected to deliver a quarter-point hike to 3.75%, money markets similarly doubt there’s another rate rise left in the campaign – wary of a euro zone economy that’s slipping in and out of recession this year as disinflation progresses.
The euro pushed higher against a softer dollar ahead of the announcement and press conference from ECB chief Christine Lagarde. The yen also firmed as the Bank of Japan is expected to keep its easy policy unchanged on Friday.
The rest of the news was dominated by the screed of earnings hitting the headlines.
Shares in oil giants Shell and TotalEnergies fell after they both missed forecasts in reporting big profit drops for the second quarter – the result of the sharp oil price recoil over the last year.
Barclays was again an outlier in banking. Its shares dived 7% despite plans for a hefty buyback after the British lender warned of growing pressure on its UK business and missed forecasts for its investment bank as a global corporate dealmaking slump persists.
The euro zone’s biggest bank BNP Paribas, by contrast, beat Q2 estimates and the stock jumped 4%.
In Asia, Hong Kong shares rose in line with world markets, but mainland China indices continue to stumble under a cloud. China’s industrial profits extended this year’s double-digit pace of declines into a sixth month, falling almost 17% for the year through June.