The Paris Bourse slowly increased its gains, and the CAC40 climbed to 8,180, coming within 0.4% of its all-time intraday record and in a position to set a new closing record.
Trading volumes were once again derisory, with 1 billion euros exchanged in 6 hours and 15 minutes.

The Euro-Stoxx50 climbed back up to the 5,000 mark, and a closing zenith would be validated at 5,001 at 5:35 pm.
The day got off to a good start with the Nikkei (+0.6%) back above the 40,000Pts mark: Japanese operators gave an unemotional welcome to the Bank of Japan's (BoJ) decision to normalize its monetary policy by raising its key rate for the 1st time in 17 years, in the face of resurgent inflation and rising wage tensions in the country.
By a large majority, the BoJ Committee decided to put an end to 8 years of negative interest rates, opting for a key rate of between 0% and 0.1%, instead of -0.1%.
Since the start of the year, the Nikkei has gained almost 19%, on a par with the American "Magnificent Seven" and the great European "Grannolas" (GSK, Roche, ASML, Nestlé, Novartis, Novo Nordisk, L'Oréal, LVMH, Astrazeneca, SAP and Sanofi).


On Wall Street, US indices consolidated Monday's rise, with the Dow Jones gaining 0.2% and the S&P500 losing 0.2%.
The Nasdaq-100 is down -0.8% in the wake of AMD (-5.6%), Marvell (-4.6%) and Nvidia (-3%).

In the US, both housing starts and building permits were up in February, according to statistics from the Commerce Department.
Housing starts rebounded by 10.3% last month to a seasonally-adjusted annualized rate of 1,521,000, a much stronger recovery than expected.

The number of building permits issued in February rose by 1.9% to an annualized rate of 1,518,000, again exceeding financial market expectations.
Economists were expecting a rebound in both statistics in February, after January's unfavorable weather had weighed heavily on the residential construction sector.

Investors are now hoping that the US Federal Reserve will adopt a similarly reassuring tone at the end of its two-day meeting, which starts today.

However, some observers fear that the US central bank is preparing the ground for only two rate cuts this year, whereas it had previously expected three.

In view of the healthy state of the US economy, the money markets now rate a rate cut in June with only a 50.7% probability, according to the FedWatch barometer.

In the end, the first rate cut may not take place until the third quarter, a far cry from the initial projections of investors, who at the start of the year were hoping for a reduction in the cost of money as early as March.

"And it is perhaps this situation that could push equity markets to consolidate a little", warns Alexandre Baradez, Head of Market Analysis at IG France.

In Europe, Germany's ZEW business climate index rose for the 8th month in a row: the indicator gained 11.8 points between February and March 2023 to stand at 31.7 points, its highest level for 12 months.

"Economic conditions in Germany are fragile, so it will be interesting to see if things have changed in March before the publication of the PMI indices scheduled for Thursday", explains Danske Bank.

On the bond front, Bunds are stagnating at 2.455%, while our OATs are perfectly unchanged at 2.8900%.
US T-Bonds are easing by -3pts to 4.31%, erasing the previous day's losses.
On FOREX, the Dollar is still clawing back a few fractions (+0.2% against the Euro).
Oil is continuing its rally and is now testing $87.5 in London (Brent) and $82.7 on the NYMEX (WTI).
Gold is not following suit and remains stuck at $2,155.


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