European equity futures struggled for momentum and stocks in Asia traded little changed, with investors awaiting readings on US inflation for clues on the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate path.
Euro Stoxx 50 futures signaled a muted start, while an Asia Pacific equity gauge was little changed, with Hong Kong and Chinese shares in the red. Japanese stocks climbed, supported by an advance in commodity companies and a slightly weak yen.
“Markets have a close eye on US producer price data later today, as it could be used to confirm or deny this week’s hotter CPI report,” said Matt Simpson, a senior market strategist at City Index Inc. “That seems to be suppressing volatility more than usual in today’s Asian session, not helped by the lack economic data this session.”
Sentiment remained fragile in Chinese markets despite officials pledging central government funds to encourage consumers and businesses to replace old equipment and goods. Shares linked to Asian copper miners advanced after the metal jumped to an 11-month high on likely capacity cuts at Chinese smelters.
Meanwhile, contracts for US equities ticked marginally higher after a listless US session on Wednesday with the S&P 500 ending lower and the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 falling 0.8%.
Following a hot reading consumer inflation, the US producer price index due later Thursday likely rose amid a rebound in energy prices, according to Estelle Ou at Bloomberg Economics.
Other US data in the pipeline this week will offer further signs of the health of the US economy and the effect of monetary policy. The Federal Reserve’s interest rate decision is due next week.