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German stock futures, euro jump on Merz win
FILE PHOTO: New 20 Euro banknotes are presented at the Austrian national bank in Vienna · Reuters

By Wayne Cole

SYDNEY (Reuters) -European shares and the euro climbed on Monday as Germany's election produced no nasty surprises, while Wall Street futures firmed on hopes results from AI diva Nvidia this week would justify the tech sector's sky-high valuations.

DAX futures jumped 1.1%, while the single currency rose 0.5% to $1.0516 and looked set to test its January top at $0.10535. EUROSTOXX 50 futures added 0.4% and FTSE futures 0.1%.

German's new conservative leader Friedrich Merz still has to form a coalition government and it is not yet clear whether that will include one or two partners, with the latter likely to take more time and horse trading.

The uncertainty comes as European Union leaders are set to hold an extraordinary summit on March 6 to discuss additional support for Ukraine and how to pay for European defence needs.

Liquidity was thinned by a holiday in Tokyo markets and MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan dipped 0.2%. Nikkei futures traded at 38,310, under the cash close of 38,776.

Chinese blue chips eased 0.1%, but Hong Kong shares firmed 0.2% to extend their recent tech-driven bull run.

S&P 500 futures added 0.4% and Nasdaq futures 0.5%. The Nasdaq had fallen 2.5% last week, its worst week in three months, with losses led by the Magnificent Seven. [.N]

That pullback raised the stakes for Nvidia's results on Wednesday where investors are looking for fourth-quarter sales around $38.5 billion and first-quarter guidance around $42.5 billion.

As usual, options point to a share price move of around 8% in either direction should the results surprise.

Wall Street had taken a hit on Friday when a survey on services showed a shock slide in activity amid concerns about tariffs and cost pressures. There were even reports the White House was pressuring Mexico to put its own tariffs on Chinese imports as part of a deal.

INFLATION SCARE

The Federal Reserve's favoured measure of core inflation is due on Friday and expected to show a slowdown to 2.6% from 2.8%, but could be overshadowed by tariff worries.

A survey of U.S. consumers out on Friday showed inflation expectations for 5 to 10 years ahead climbed to 3.5%, the highest since 1995.

"Longer-run inflation expectations are at risk of becoming de-anchored," warned analysts at ANZ in a note. "That was the clear message from the subset of soft U.S. economic surveys released on Friday, and for the Fed, the data signal that enhanced caution is required."

At least nine Fed officials are speaking this week, some of them more than once, and are likely to reiterate the cautious message on further rate cuts.