This report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Like what you see? You can subscribe here.
What you need to know today
Geopolitical uncertainty
Major U.S. indexes all closed slightly above the flatline on Wednesday. Oil prices continued rising, helping energy stocks outperform. Nike fell 6.8% and Tesla lost 3.5%. Asia-Pacific stocks traded mixed Thursday. Japan's Nikkei 225 rose about 2% as the yen slipped, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng index dropped around 1.4% after enjoying a strong rally on Wednesday.
Yen slides on Ishiba's dovish comments
The Japanese yen fell to as low as 147.15 against the U.S. dollar during Asia trading hours today on dovish comments from new Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba. "I do not believe that we are in an environment that would require us to raise interest rates further," Ishiba said Wednesday. Analysts, however, think the Bank of Japan will still raise rates by early 2025.
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OpenAI's $157 billion valuation
OpenAI has raised $6.6 billion in its latest funding round, putting it at a valuation of $157 billion. The round was led by Thrive Capital – which planned to invest $1 billion – and included participation from Microsoft, Nvidia and Softbank, said a person with knowledge of the matter.
Behind India's booming market
India Nifty 50 index is up 18.7% year to date, hitting record highs on its way there. Several factors are driving its rally: public infrastructure investments by the government, companies diversifying their supply chains away from China to India, healthy economic growth, a growing population and lower U.S. Federal Reserve interest rates.
[PRO] Opportunities amid disruptions
Strikes by longshoremen at U.S. coastal ports are only the latest in a series of supply chain disruptions we've experienced in recent years. While those interruptions are generally bad for the global economy by increasing shipment prices and delivery times, Goldman Sachs thinks some stocks can benefit from such events.
Money Report
The bottom line
The nature of today's globalized world means that the manufacturing process of one smartphone may take it to more places around the world than I will ever be.
It may begin with designing a blueprint in the U.S., sourcing minerals from China, manufacturing semiconductors in Taiwan, assembling the product in India and working with the European Union to meet standards.
But supply lines are so intricately connected that the moment one link in the chain snaps, the whole process can be interrupted.
That's why the recent tension in the Middle East – already simmering for a year, now bubbling slightly more furiously – has weighed on investor sentiment across the world. The conflict's effects are magnified because the region is the epicenter of oil production, and oil is, well, literally the fuel for the global economy.
Furthermore, producing oil is not like manufacturing a smartphone, in which a company can shift assembly to another country. Either there is or isn't oil in the land. Oil suppliers are bound to where they are.
You'd expect that markets would have been shaken by that threat to the global economy. But all major U.S. indexes managed to close just a tad above the flatline. The S&P 500 was mostly unchanged, the Dow Jones Industrial Average eked out a 0.09% gain and the Nasdaq Composite ticked up 0.08%.
Headwinds blowing from Middle East might have been tempered by optimism in China.
Lifted by Beijing's recent announcement of economic stimulus, Chinese stocks have been on a tear. That's caused U.S. exchange-traded funds that track Chinese stocks to rally, helping to keep the U.S. market afloat amid worries over the escalating Middle East conflict.
Indeed, U.S. stocks tend to benefit whenever the Chinese government unleashes economic stimulus and credit expansion, according to Ryan Grabinski, strategist at Strategas Securities.
Here's the flipside of globalization: Negative developments in one part of the world may weigh down others, but positive ones will radiate optimism beyond their origin.
– CNBC's Hakyung Kim, Yun Li, Alex Harring and Samantha Subin contributed to this story.