Morning Bid: Investors go shopping for Q3

The most bought Stocks and Shares ISA funds in 2023, so far

Article originally published by Reuters. Hargreaves Lansdown is not responsible for its content or accuracy and may not share the author's views. News and research are not personal recommendations to deal. All investments can fall in value so you could get back less than you invest.

The session is the first buying day for the quarter ahead, given that trades settle the following day.

In the quarter closing out, the biggest oil supply shock on record has hardly left a blemish on financial markets, as demand cuts in China, alternative shipping routes and producers plugged the crude shortfall.

Oil prices ​have fallen ⁠back to levels before the U.S.-Israeli-Iran conflict began at the end of February, and ⁠skirmishes straining the ceasefire are drawing little reaction.

Even the bond market seems to be moving on. Traders are sticking with expectations for modest U.S. rate hikes, though on the basis of ​strong U.S. growth rather than runaway inflation.

Bonds were mostly unmoved by the U.S. Supreme Court's refusal, as foreshadowed in January, to let President Donald Trump fire Fed governor Lisa Cook.

And ​the AI rally has run on unhindered, driving gains of 100% in the ⁠first half for South Korea's KOSPI index and a record quarterly rise of about 36% for ⁠Japan's Nikkei.

Flows have been counterintuitive, with foreign cash streaming out from South Korea and dragging down the won as investors take ‌profit and rebalance through the rally, leaving ​retail investors to chase the gains.

Some recent speed wobbles may turn market focus to a broader range of rising but less ⁠red-hot stocks in Europe, where the STOXX index is up about 9% for the quarter, and Asia, where China's ‌mainland blue chips are up 10%.

And the yen is on the ​ropes, along with ‌the won, thanks to the markets' view that Japan is lagging behind a global move higher in interest rates. ‌It crossed 162 to the dollar for the first ⁠time since ⁠1986 in the Asia session and the risk of intervention is higher and higher, traders say, the nearer the rate nudges to 165.

German, French and Italian inflation readings are due and could show annual rates dropping and reinforce that rates can be on hold in Europe for some time.

The European ​Central Bank's Isabel Schnabel appears on a panel in Sintra, where Fed Chair Kevin Warsh is due on Wednesday.

(Editing by Jacqueline Wong)

Copyright (2026) Thomson Reuters.

This article was from Reuters and was legally licensed through the DiveMarketplace by Industry Dive. Please direct all licensing questions to legal@industrydive.com.

Weekly Newsletter
Sign up for Editor's choice. Get more investing insight like this in our weekly newsletter – Editor's choice.