Swiss Stock Market Extends Winning Streak To Five Sessions

RTTNews | 575 days ago
Swiss Stock Market Extends Winning Streak To Five Sessions

(RTTNews) - The Swiss stock market has finished higher now in five straight sessions, climbing almost 300 points or 2.9 percent in that span.

The SMI opened slightly higher on Tuesday and spent much of the day bouncing back and forth across the unchanged line before a late surge nudged it into the green at the close.

The upward movement was in line with other major European markets, which ticked higher as investors digested mixed regional data and looked ahead to key Federal Reserve and Bank of England meetings this week for directional cues.

For the day, the index rose 13.30 points or 0.12 percent to finish at 11,443.13 after trading between 11,420.15 and 11,473.57.

Among the actives, Swiss Life surged 1.37 percent, while Compagnie Financiere Richemont spiked 1.32 percent, UBS Group rallied 1.29 percent, Zurich Insurance stumbled 1.26 percent, ABB jumped 0.97 percent, Adecco Group climbed 0.79 percent, Swisscom sank 0.46 percent, Nestle slumped 0.36 percent, Novartis lost 0.34 percent and Swiss Re fell 0.18 percent.

In economic news, Switzerland's foreign trade surplus increased during the year 2023 compared to last year as exports rebounded amid a fall in imports, data from the Federal Customs Administration showed on Tuesday.

The trade surplus for 2023 was CHF 48.5 billion, up from CHF 42.8 billion in 2022. In real terms, exports rose 2.5 percent in 2023 versus a 0.7 percent fall in the previous year. Imports logged a decrease of 2.0 percent over the year, reversing a 1.0 percent gain in 2022.

read more
European Stocks Close On Mixed Note

European Stocks Close On Mixed Note

European stocks turned in a mixed performance on Wednesday as investors largely stayed cautious, looking ahead to chipmaker Nvidia's quarterly earnings announcement, and continuing to assess the political situation in France.
RTTNews | 3h 54min ago
Euro Falls Amid Political Uncertainty

Euro Falls Amid Political Uncertainty

The euro weakened against other major currencies in the European session on Wednesday, as trader's concern about the collapse of France's government.
RTTNews | 8h 10min ago
Bay Street Likely To Open On Positive Note

Bay Street Likely To Open On Positive Note

Canadian shares are likely to open on a positive note on Wednesday, riding on strong earnings from Royal Bank of Canada and National Bank of Canada. Weak commodity prices and concerns on the geopolitical and tariffs front may weigh limit market's upside.
RTTNews | 8h 35min ago
European Stocks Turning In Mixed Performance

European Stocks Turning In Mixed Performance

European stocks are turning in a mixed performance on Wednesday as political uncertainty in France, and a lack of any significant positive triggers render the mood cautious. Investors are also awaiting earnings updates from AI major NVIDIA.
RTTNews | 9h 2min ago
FTSE 100 Flat In Lackluster Trade; Bank Stocks Drifting Lower

FTSE 100 Flat In Lackluster Trade; Bank Stocks Drifting Lower

U.K. stocks are somewhat subdued in lackluster trade on Wednesday as investors remain a bit reluctant to make significant moves due to a lack of triggers. The benchmark FTSE 100 was at 9,266.25 a little before noon, up 0.45 points over previous close.
RTTNews | 9h 51min ago
CAC 40 Advances After Recent Losses

CAC 40 Advances After Recent Losses

Despite the uncertainty on the political front, the French market is up in positive territory on Wednesday due largely to some bargain hunting at several counters after two successive days of declines. Investors are also looking ahead to AI giant Nvidia's earnings updates.
RTTNews | 10h 6min ago
DAX Remains Weak Despite Paring Some Early Losses

DAX Remains Weak Despite Paring Some Early Losses

German stocks are down in negative territory in cautious trade on Wednesday amid political uncertainty in France ahead of a confidence vote early next month, and anxiety ahead of Nvidia's earnings for clues on the AI trade.
RTTNews | 10h 23min ago