Morning News

Apple Wins Temporary Reprieve as U.S. Court Pauses Watch Ban

By Mathieu VILLARD
Published on Wed, 27.Dec.2023

Topic of the day

Apple won a temporary reprieve for its $18 billion smartwatch business after a U.S. appeals court on Wednesday paused a federal agency’s import ban on most of its watch models. The ruling will allow sales to resume in the coming weeks while the court weighs Apple’s request to pause the ban pending its appeal of an October decision by the U.S. International Trade Commission. The commission banned the import into the U.S. of some versions of the Apple Watch over violations of patents of Masimo, an Irvine, Calif.-based medical technology company. Separately, Apple has sought approval from U.S. Customs and Border Protection on redesigned versions of the two watch models subject to the ban. The customs office is responsible for enforcing import bans and is scheduled to decide on Jan. 12 whether Apple’s redesign complies with the trade agency’s finding. The Biden administration declined to overturn the ruling by a Dec. 25 deadline. The technical fix could also allow the watches to be sold in the U.S. again. Apple halted some watch sales Dec. 21 online and in stores after Dec. 24. The ban included the Series 9 and Ultra 2 models, which make up most of the company’s watch models.

Looking for New Structured Product Ideas?
https://en.swissquote.com/trading/investment-products/yield-boosters

Swiss stocks

The Swiss market stayed in negative territory on Wednesday as investors remained reluctant to make significant moves, choosing to wait for directional cues. The benchmark SMI ended down 39.11 points or 0.35% at 11,113.98, nearly 20 points off the day's low of 11,093.43. Kuehne & Nagel ended down 2.19%. Partners Group and Sonova both ended lower by 1.26%, and Alcon eased nearly 1%. Novartis, Lonza Group, Swiss Re, Swisscom, Zurich Insurance Group, Givaudan and Geberit lost 0.4 to 0.8%. Swiss Life Holding and Richemont ended up 0.62% and 0.6%, respectively. Sika gained 0.37%. In the Mid Price Index, Sandoz ended 2.57% down. Ems Chemie Holdings drifted down 0.8%, while ams OSRAM AG, Galenica Sante, BKW and Flughafen Zurich ended down 0.3 to 0.5%. Meyer Burger Tech gained about 1.65%, recovering a bit from recent sharp losses. Adecco, Avolta, Swatch Group and Julius Baer gained 1 to 1.5%. In economic news, a report from UBS & CFA Society said the Swiss investors' sentiment index rose by 5.9 points from the previous month to -23.7 in December. The reading points to the lowest amount of pessimism fro Swiss investors in ten months.

International markets

Europe
European markets, back to business after a long weekend, closed mostly higher on Wednesday, amid expectations the Federal Reserve will likely cut interest rates in March 2024. Several other central banks are also widely expected to ease their policy tightening to spur growth. The pan European Stoxx 600 ended 0.21% up. The U.K.'s FTSE 100 climbed 0.36%, Germany's DAX gained 0.21% and France's CAC 40 edged up 0.04%, while Switzerland's SMI ended 0.35% down. Among other markets in Europe, Austria, Belgium, Finland, Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Netherlands, Norway, Poland and Sweden ended higher. Denmark, Portugal, Russia and Spain closed marginally up, while Turkiye ended weak. In the UK market, Anglo American Plc, Rentokil Initial, Hargreaves Lansdown, Phoenix Holdings, Entain and Segro gained 2 to 3%. Fresnillo, Ashtead Group, Spirax-Sarco Engineering, Intertek, JD Sports Fashion, Natwest Group, Prudential and DCC advanced 1.2 to 1.8%. Carnival ended nearly 6% down. Rolls-Royce Holdings, Vodafone Group, Imperial Brands, Smurfit Kappa Group and BT lost 1 to 1.2%. In the German market, Bayer climbed about 2.3% after the company said it had won a trial linked to a lawsuit filed by a Californian who alleged cancer development due to exposure to Bayer's Roundup weedkiller. Siemens Energy rallied nearly 5.5%, while SAP, Vonovia and Puma gained 1 to 1.2%. E.ON, Fresenius, Zalando, Munich RE and Deutsche Telekom ended down 0.7 to 1.2%. In Paris, WorldLine surged nearly 3%. Alstom, Societe Generale, Capgemini and Kering gained 1 to 1.5%. Veolia, Orange, Hermes International, Renault and LVMH closed weak.

United States
The S&P 500 closed just shy of an all-time high Wednesday, a sign of the optimism that has sent stocks rallying this year after a punishing 2022. The benchmark index crept up 0.1% Wednesday, leaving it 0.3% shy of its January 2022 record close. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite added 0.2%. The blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.3%, or about 111 points, its sixth record high this month. It has taken the S&P 500 almost two years to come back to its previous highs and notch a new record. Sticky inflation, aggressive interest-rate increases and Russia’s war in Ukraine robbed stocks of upward momentum last year. Investors entered 2023 worried that a recession loomed. Stocks are also on track for a so-called Santa Claus rally—the bump stocks often get in the period spanning the last five trading days of the year and first two of the next. The talk of lower interest rates has fueled other parts of the economy—especially housing, which slowed down considerably after the Fed started raising rates. Rocket Cos., UWM Holdings and loanDepot, three of the largest mortgage companies, are up more than 100% in 2023, putting them at their highest levels in roughly two years. New York Times shares added 2.8% after the news publisher sued Microsoft and OpenAI for alleged copyright infringement.

Asia
Stock markets in Asia mostly continued their winning streak on Thursday. Speculation that the U.S. Federal Reserve will soon cut interest rates and that the U.S. economy will have a "soft landing" are encouraging investors to buy shares, according to market participants. The Composite Index in Shanghai advances by 1.2 percent, while the Hang Seng Index in Hong Kong gains 2.0 percent. Alongside automotive stocks, real estate stocks are in demand. They benefited from the fact that the cities of Beijing and Shanghai recently made it easier to buy private real estate.

Bonds
In U.S. bond markets, the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury ticked down to 3.788% from 3.885% Tuesday. The two-year yield ticked lower to 4.242% from 4.339% Tuesday.

Analysis
Baader downgrades Partners Group to Reduce (Buy) – Target CHF 1,200 (1,075)

Citi lowers Standard Chartered to 675 (750) GBp – Neutral

Citi lowers HSBC to 880 (940) GBp – Buy

關注我們

贊助商
UEFA Europa LeagueUEFA Women’s EURO 2025Genève ServetteZSC Lions

小心風險

在外匯交易平台上交易槓桿產品,例如外匯,現貨金屬和差價合約,都會因槓桿效應而面臨重大的虧損風險,因而並不適合所有投資者。在開立瑞訊之交易帳戶前,請考慮個人經驗水平、投資目標、資產、收入和可承擔之風險水平。理論上,虧損是可以無上限,如果帳戶餘額低於所需保證金水平,您有可能被追加資金,因此您不應該以自己無法承受虧損的資金進行交易,即您不應借入資金或以個人或家庭生活所急需或必要的資金進行投機、投資或對沖。過去12 個月,76.32%的零售投資者在交易差價合約時出現虧損、在平倉時損失全部保證金或平倉後帳戶出現負值。您必須清楚了解外匯交易中所有相關風險,如果有任何疑問時,應及時向獨立財務顧問尋求建議。如需更多資料,包括槓桿的影響、保證金交易的操作以及交易對手和市場風險,請參閱我們的外匯和差價合約風險披揭露。本網頁之內容包含市場推廣訊息,內容並沒有提交亦沒有得到相關監管機構之批核。

AI 生成的內容

我們網站上的一些視覺內容是使用人工智慧 (AI) 應用程式產生和/或增強的。但是,所有內容都經過徹底的人工審查和核准,以確保其準確性、相關性,並符合我們使用者和客戶的需求。