Here are 4 tips for today's trading. This will help you decide where you should invest and what to look for:
Here are 4 tips for today's trading. This will help you decide where you should invest and what to look for:
1. Japan goes negative, markets go positive
1. Japan goes negative, markets go positive
The Bank of Japan is stepping up its efforts to push the country's struggling economy forward by taking interest rates into negative territory.
The central bank announced Friday that it will introduce an interest rate of minus 0.1%, and will go even lower if needed.
In theory, negative rates encourage consumers to save less, and borrow and spend more. They can also weaken a country's currency, helping exporters.
Unsurprisingly, the yen dropped sharply versus all major global currencies on Friday. The interest rate move pushed Japan's key stock market index up by 2.8%.
2. Stock markets go high up
2. Stock markets go high up
The interest rate move in Japan is having effects around the world.
U.S. stock futures are rising by about 1% as investors cheer the latest official effort to pump free money into the financial system.
European markets are also rising by about 1% to 2%. And all Asian stock markets closed the week with gains.
3. Market movers
3. Market movers
Shares in Amazon (AMZN, Tech30) are falling by 12% premarket after the company's earnings badly missed Wall Street forecasts.
Shares in Microsoft (MSFT, Tech30) are rising by about 4% premarket after the tech giant reported better-than-expected quarterly results.
Investors are watching Xerox (XRX) as the company is expected to announce it will split itself into two companies. The firm is also reporting earnings Friday morning.
Shares in Sony (SNE) surged by 6% in Japan after the company reported quarterly results that beat market expectations. The company said strong revenue from its movies and PlayStation 4 helped offset declines in other business units.
4. Earnings and economics
4. Earnings and economics
Xerox, along with MasterCard (MA), Chevron (CVX), Whirlpool (WHR) and Colgate-Palmolive (CL) are among the long list of companies reporting ahead of the open.
On the economic front, the U.S. government is releasing its latest GDP data for the fourth quarter at 8:30 a.m. ET.
The Russian central bank is slated to make an interest rate announcement this morning. Russians have started protesting about the country's deep recession and the ruble is trading near record lows.
Official European inflation data came out at 5 a.m. ET, indicating prices across the region rose 0.4% in January, which was in line with expectations. Prices rose by a measly 0.2% in December.
January market recap: It was a crazy, volatile, eventful month in the markets.
The Dow Jones industrial average has fallen by nearly 8%, the S&P 500 is down by 7.4% and the Nasdaq has plunged 10%.