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Morning Bid: Finally, a bounce on Wall Street. But for how long?
Traders work on the floor of the NYSE in New York · Reuters

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By Jamie McGeever

ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) - TRADING DAY

Making sense of the forces driving global markets

Investors breathed a sigh of relief on Wednesday after U.S. inflation figures for February came in below forecasts, triggering a rebound in the S&P 500 and Nasdaq from six-month lows that should help put global markets on a firm footing on Thursday.

The CPI inflation report overshadowed the latest 'tit for tat' twist in the global trade war - U.S. President Donald Trump said he would slap further tariffs on European Union goods after the EU and other U.S. trading partners said they would retaliate for trade barriers already erected by the U.S. president.

"Whatever they charge us, we're charging them," Trump said.

The question now is, how much juice does this bounce have?

Today's Key Market Moves.

* Two of Wall Street's main three indices rise. The Nasdaqgains 1.3% and the S&P 500 is up 0.5%, while the Dow dips 0.2%. * Big Tech are among the big winners - Tesla jumps 7.6% forits best day in two months, Palantir Technologies rises 7% andNvidia adds 6.4% for its best day in six weeks. * Intel shares surge 12% in after-hours trading after thechipmaker names former board member Lip-Bu Tan as its new CEO. * The Canadian dollar rises 0.5% after the Bank of Canadacuts rates, lifted by more balanced guidance and warnings oftariff-fueled price pressures. * U.S. bond yields rise despite cooling inflation and gooddemand at a 10-year auction. Trade war fears push up the 10-yearyield by 3 basis points to 4.32%. * Nikkei futures point to a rise of around 1% at the open inTokyo on Thursday.

Earlier on Wednesday Japanese wholesale inflation for February came in at 4.0% thanks to buoyant raw material costs. Also in Japan, wage negotiations across major firms in the process of concluding point to another year of substantial - in some cases, record - pay increases.

All this keeps alive expectations of a near-term interest rate hike by the Bank of Japan, and the 10-year JGB yield crept higher on Wednesday, close to Monday's 16-year high.

One central bank definitely not hiking rates is the Bank of Canada, which lowered its key policy rate by 25 basis points on Wednesday to 2.75%, the seventh consecutive cut in nine months.

But the easing cycle could end soon, with Trump's trade war threatening to lift inflation - "a new crisis," as BOC Governor Tiff Macklem put it.

Meanwhile, Wall Street's rebound on Wednesday could extend further because some short term technical and momentum indicators suggest the selloff is overdone. Truist's Keith Lerner, for example, points out that the 'Relative Strength Index' for the S&P 500 has just moved into 'oversold' territory for the first time since October 2023.