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A file photo shows a man walking past an electronic board displaying stock prices of Nikkei 225 listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange along a street in Tokyo.  | AFP photo

Global stock markets diverged on Friday in a quiet end to a week’s trading dominated by earnings updates.

Wall Street’s main indices rose at the opening bell, with a dip in the yield on US government bonds helping give equities a boost.


Focus this week has been on earnings as major companies worldwide report on their third-quarter performances.

But a rise on US bond yields — at least partially due to worries that a return to the White House by Donald Trump would lead to tax cuts that fuel inflation — have acted as a headwind.

Next week will see five of the ‘Magnificent Seven’ tech stocks reporting earnings, including Alphabet (Google), Amazon, Apple, Meta (Facebook) and Microsoft.

Key US monthly jobs numbers come out on Friday.

‘This could prove a big test for the markets, while also being a driver of sentiment as we head towards year-end,’ said Trade Nation analyst David Morrison.

In Europe, London edged higher as investors awaited the first budget of Britain’s new Labour government on Wednesday, expected to include tax rises on businesses.

Meanwhile, shares in British bank NatWest jumped nearly five per cent before paring gains as investors welcomed the lender’s strong increase in profits, with income higher thanks to interest rates remaining elevated.

Frankfurt also edged higher after data showed Germany’s business confidence rebounded in October.

That ended a four-month streak of declines and offered some rare good news for Europe’s beleaguered top economy.

Mercedes-Benz stock shed 1.3 per cent after the German luxury carmaker said group profits slumped more than 50 per cent, hit by weakness in the key Chinese market. 

In Asia, Shanghai and Hong Kong markets rose amid hopes of stronger growth in China following the country’s recent attempts to stimulate its stalling economy. 

Crude futures climbed and the dollar was mixed versus main rivals heading into the weekend break.

Tokyo’s stock market closed down and the yen dipped against the dollar ahead of Japan’s national elections on Sunday.

Independent analyst Stephen Innes pointed to uncertainty over the vote and an upcoming Bank of Japan policy meeting as complicating the outlook for Japanese equities.

‘Between election jitters and BoJ chess moves, Tokyo markets are probably in for a busy opening on Monday.’

‘Oil prices have shifted higher, with Brent crude heading towards $75 a barrel... as concerns about the Middle East stay in focus,’ noted Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets at stockbroker Hargreaves Lansdown.