Financial News 11th August 2025

Market overview
Wall Street ended the week on a high note, with the S&P 500 up 0.80%, the Nasdaq climbing nearly 1% to notch a second consecutive record close, and the Dow adding 206 points on Friday. Technology shares led the gains, driven by a 4.20% jump in Apple after it announced a $600 billion US investment plan, lifting the tech-heavy Nasdaq. Sentiment was further boosted by growing expectations of Federal Reserve (Fed) rate cuts, after President Trump nominated Stephen Miran to the Fed Board—seen as a signal of potential policy shifts—despite lingering concerns over new tariffs on imports from multiple countries. For the week, the S&P 500 climbed 2.40%, the Dow rose 1.40%, and the Nasdaq surged 3.90%.

European stocks ended the week with strong gains, supported by upbeat corporate earnings and optimism over potential progress in the Ukraine–Russia conflict. The STOXX 50 added 0.40% on Friday, up 3.60% for the week, while the STOXX 600 rose 0.30%, a weekly gain of 2.20%. Markets also absorbed the effects of President Trump’s newly announced retaliatory tariffs and evolving trade dynamics, alongside speculation about potential policy measures from the European Central Bank.

Mainland Chinese stocks eased on Friday as investors awaited key inflation data that could provide fresh insight into the health of the world’s second-largest economy. Sentiment was tempered despite Thursday’s trade figures showing July exports surging well above expectations, driven by a rush to ship goods ahead of the US tariff deadline. Imports also rose to their highest level in a year, pointing to stronger domestic demand. The Shanghai Composite slipped 0.12% to 3 635 points, while the Shenzhen Component fell 0.26% to 11 129. Hong Kong stocks also slipped on Friday, snapping a four-day winning streak as broad-based losses weighed on the market. The Hang Seng shed 0.90% to close at 24 859 points.

Turning to South Africa, the FTSE/JSE All Share Index gained about 0.20%, closing near 100 855 points. The local market was supported by stronger resource and industrial stocks, boosted by rising gold and platinum prices. Meanwhile, financial shares showed caution ahead of the upcoming quarterly GDP release. The rand showed modest strength, briefly dipping below R17.75 to the dollar before easing back, as investors balanced improved risk appetite with cautiousness ahead of key domestic data releases. For the week, the local bourse gained approximately 1.50%. 

Thanks to PSG Wealth for this summary of the past week.

Financial indicators by Sharedata.co.za

All Share index remains bullish despite Trump’s tariffs
The All Share index on the JSE recorded once again a record-breaking week. The index reached 101 034 points in intra-trade on Friday, gaining 0.2% on the day. The index improved over the week by 3.2%, advancing by 19.7% for the year to date. See the full article by Chris Harmse on IOL Business Report here>

Old Mutual warns of a retirement disaster for South Africans
Old Mutual has raised the alarm over the growing risk of South Africans retiring without enough money. This is according to Old Mutual’s head of financial education, John Manyike, who warned that the country’s new two‑part retirement system is being used in ways that could erode long‑term savings. Read the full article on Businesstech.co.za here>

Oil slips as traders watch US-Russia talks on Ukraine
Oil prices fell in Asian trade on Monday, extending declines of more than 4% last week as investors awaited the outcome of talks between the US and Russia later this week on the war in Ukraine. Read the ful BusinessDay article here>

Dollar steady before US inflation report, US-China tariff deadline
The U.S. dollar was consolidating on Monday before Tuesday’s deadline for Washington and Beijing to strike a tariff deal and a key U.S. inflation report that could help determine whether the Federal Reserve lowers borrowing costs next month. Read the latest report from Reuters here>

Gold loses ground amid easing geopolitical tension
Gold slipped on Monday as signs of easing geopolitical risks weighed on its safe-haven demand, with markets now focused on upcoming US inflation data that could offer insight into the Federal Reserve’s interest rate outlook. Read the full BusinessDay article here>

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