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European markets choppy as investors monitor inflation, bond yields; Soitec falls 15%

KEY POINTS
Global markets have been focused on rising U.S. bond yields and earnings this week
Inflation concerns have dominated markets around the world in recent months and investors are nervous over the U.S. Federal Reserve’s trajectory for hiking interest rates and tightening its ultra-loose pandemic-era monetary policy
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LONDON — European stocks were uncertain on Thursday as investors appeared to brush off concerns about rampant inflation

TICKER COMPANY NAME PRICE CHANGE %CHANGE VOLUME
.FTSE FTSE 100 *FTSE 7555.74 -33.92 -0.45 421953074
.GDAXI DAX *DAX 15827.03 17.31 0.11 35194586
.FCHI CAC 40 Index CAC 7162.5 -10.48 -0.15 38932594

The pan-European Stoxx 600 slid 0.2% by late morning, having initially opened in positive territory. Autos dropped 1.1% while travel and leisure stocks climbed 1.2%

Shares of Swiss online pharmacy Zur Rose Group rose 6.7% to lead the Stoxx 600 after a strong earnings report

French industrial company Soitec plunged more than 15% to the bottom of the index after announcing that senior Atos executive Pierre Barnabe will succeed outgoing CEO Paul Boudre

Global markets have been focused on rising U.S. bond yields and earnings this week. Inflation data is also center-stage; on Wednesday, data released by the U.K. showed the inflation rate soared to a 30-year high in December hitting 5.4% with higher energy costs, resurgent demand and supply chain issues continuing to drive up consumer prices

Inflation concerns have dominated markets around the world in recent months and investors are nervous over the U.S. Federal Reserve’s trajectory for hiking interest rates and tightening its ultra-loose pandemic-era monetary policy

U.S. markets encountered another choppy trading session on Wednesday as investors remained cautious amid rising rates, with the Nasdaq dipping into correction territory

This year’s turbulence in tech stocks, set off by a spike in yields in the first week of January, continued Wednesday as the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield hit a high of 1.9%. It started the year at about 1.5%. The yield on the 30-year Treasury bond fell 2 basis points to 2.167%. Yields move inversely to prices

U.S. equities futures rose in early premarket trade while markets in Asia-Pacific were mixed on Thursday as China cut its key lending rates

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