• Wall Street ended last session with new highs in Nasdaq and S & P
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The day of this Tuesday begins with the investors looking at the two Koreas, reunited with the excuse of agreeing the participation of North Korea in the Olympic Winter Games (they have already confirmed that it will attend) and with the real idea of reaching an approach between both countries. Japan and the United States have held talks this morning to reaffirm their policy towards North Korea. The director general of the Institute of International Relations of Japan, Koichi Ai, has stressed that the regime of Kim Jong-un "is the most dangerous threat facing the Japanese nation" and has indicated that this approach "does nothing to alleviate the threat nuclear".

  • 10.729,500
  • -0,33%

The European markets start again on Tuesday with the theme of North Korea as a backdrop but with that sense of tranquility with which, in general, 2018 have started all the world places. Wall Street recorded new historical highs in Nasdaq and S & P last week (the Dow Jones slightly corrected) and continues to be an incentive for the other indices. In Asia they have seen rises this morning.

The Ibex finally corrected this Monday and took a deserved respite after the revaluation, over 3%, last week. The expert of 'Bolsamania', José María Rodríguez, recalls that there is a "small support" in the bullish gap of the session last Friday, at 10,314 points. "Which means that our Ibex could fall to that level without, in fact, anything happening," he says. Above, the level to watch continues to be the everlasting 10,600 points.

On the other hand, the European stock markets are flat on Tuesday (Ibex: + 0.07%, 10,406 points). At this time, data from Germany have already been published (industrial production in November has risen much more than expected: 3.4% compared to the expected 1.8%). The most important reference of the session will be the unemployment rate of the Euro Zone in November, which is expected to fall to 8.7% from 8.8%. Even so, it would still be above the estimate of the European Commission that stands at 8.4% by 2018..

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