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Business live
Japan’s Nikkei hits record high; Lloyds and Rolls-Royce profits surge
Live  
Japan’s Nikkei hits record high; Lloyds and Rolls-Royce profits surge
Japan’s main stock index rises on optimism about AI boom spread by bumper results from US chipmaker Nvidia
Headlines
Banking  
Lloyds sets aside £450m for car loan fines and payouts
Lloyds sets aside £450m for car loan fines and payouts
Technology  
Nvidia reports enormous revenue as AI hits a tipping point
Gambling  
Digital slot machine limit of £2 set to cost operators in UK millions
Construction  
UK criticised over apparent call to firms to rebuild disputed areas of Azerbaijan
Automotive  
Vauxhall’s Luton plant to manufacture electric vans in UK from next year
Jim Ratcliffe  
Building of vast petrochemical plant in Antwerp faces new legal challenge
Property  
Serious Fraud Office arrests four in raids over failed Liverpool firm
Aviation  
Boeing 737 Max programme chief ousted after cabin panel blowout
Work  
Four-day week made permanent for most UK firms in world’s biggest trial
Automotive  
German town votes against Tesla plans to expand ‘gigafactory’
Media  
BuzzFeed plans to lay off 16% of employees after selling Complex
Banking  
HSBC shares suffer biggest one-day drop in nearly four years
Steel industry  
UK officials recommend extending post-Brexit quotas
Bank of England  
First notes featuring King Charles III to be released on 5 June
Airports  
Heathrow returns to profit with record passenger numbers forecast for 2024
Today's agenda
Japan’s main stock index has hit an all-time closing high, ahead of the previous record set in 1989, surging on optimism about the AI boom spread by bumper results from the US chipmaker Nvidia.

The Nikkei rose 2.19% to end the day at 39,098.68. On the final trading day of 1989, it had closed at 38,915.87. The 34 years it has taken to regain its footing is a decade longer than it took Wall Street to recoup losses from the 1929 crash and Great Depression.

Tsutomu Yamada, a senior market analyst at Abu Kabucom Securities in Tokyo, told Reuters: "For us traders, this marks the arrival of a new era. It feels like the stock market is telling us that we’ve finally escaped from deflation and a new world has opened up."

This morning in London, we’ve had buoyant figures from Lloyds Banking Group and the aircraft engine maker Rolls-Royce.

Lloyds’s annual pre-tax profits jumped 57% to £7.5bn, even though the UK bank put aside £450m for potential fines and compensation for motor finance customers, after the UK regulator opened an investigation into whether consumers had been charged inflated prices for car loans. Profits at Rolls-Royce more than doubled last year to £1.6bn.

Last night, after US markets closed, Nvidia beat expectations again and reported sales of $22.1bn for the fourth quarter of last year, up 22% from the quarter before, and an eye popping 265% higher than in the same period the year before. And for the current quarter, it said it will deliver $24bn sales.

The chief executive and company founder Jensen Huang said: "Accelerated computing and generative AI have hit the tipping point. Demand is surging worldwide across companies, industries and nations."

Nvidia shares jumped 10% in after-hours trading.

Josh Gilbert, market analyst at trading platform eToro, said: "Nvidia reasserted its place in the Magnificent 7 with another blowout quarter showing that AI use cases are exploding, and the AI boom is showing no signs of slowing down.

"The big question for investors is, can this continue? Put simply, yes. Nvidia continues to deliver in every way, and its results show there is still plenty of growth ahead. This isn’t just a flash in the pan, nor a bubble, but a business that continues to make serious cash.

"Despite the risks from issues in China and ongoing competition, that can pose headwinds moving forward, Nvidia raised its guidance for the next quarter to $24bn in revenue, putting it on track to nearly $100bn in sales over the next year."

Also last night, the US Federal Reserve’s minutes of its last meeting showed that policymakers were not eager to cut interest rates at that meeting, and expressed optimism and caution on inflation. They also modified the post-meeting statement to signal that rate cuts would only occur when the federal open market committee had “greater confidence” that inflation was diminishing.

Stephen Innes, managing partner at SPI Asset Management, said: "Sure, the minutes were a tad outdated, but they certainly skewed much more cautiously than when [Fed president Jerome] Powell told reporters late last month that a March rate cut was still possible, at least in the market’s view."

The agenda
• 8.15am-9am GMT: HCOB PMI flash for February for France, Germany, eurozone
• 9.30am GMT: UK S&P global PMI flash for February
• 10am GMT: Eurozone inflation for January (forecast: 2.8%)
• 12.30pm GMT: European Central Bank monetary policy meeting accounts
• 1.30pm GMT: US Initial jobless claims for week of 17 February
• 2.45pm GMT: US S&P Global PMI flash for February

We’ll be tracking all the main events throughout the day ...
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Popular on business
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Jeremy Hunt handed tax boost as UK posts record monthly budget surplus
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