World shares stalled just below record highs on Monday as investors awaited inflation data from the United States and eurozone that could further refine interest rate expectations. The data will provide the next test for investors, who have had to rethink their bets on central bank rate cuts in recent weeks, surprised by strong U.S. job growth and inflation. MSCI's global equity index <.MIWO00000PUS> was trading flat in early London trade, after rising to a record high last week when U.S. stocks touched new highs helped by huge gains for AI diva Nvidia

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Euro zone inflation data follows on Friday, with the core figure seen slowing to the lowest since early 2022 at 2.9 per cent, nearing the bank's 2 per cent overall inflation target. Traders have also pushed back their bets on when the European Central Bank will start cutting, to June, versus April when the ECB met in January. "While potentially causing a knee-jerk hawkish repricing, the implications of such a surprise on the Fed policy outlook seem relatively limited, hence (a higher-than-expected) print may not pose too significant a risk to the ongoing global equity rally," said Michael Brown, analyst at broker Pepperstone.

Brown added that the euro zone print was of more interest, with a sub-3 per cent core inflation reading meaning "significant scope for a dovish repricing". Comments from ECB policymakers prompted optimism over rate cuts on Friday and a broad bond market rally. On Monday, global bond yields were little moved. The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury yields were down 2 basis points to 4.24 per cent, having hit three-month highs last week before Friday's rally.

The market faces a tough test with the Treasury selling $127 billion of two- and five-year notes on Monday, with another $42 billion in seven-year paper due on Tuesday. Investors were also watching the risk that some U.S. government agencies could be shut down if Congress cannot agree on a borrowing extension by Friday.

CENTRAL BANK SPOTLIGHT

Alongside inflation, focus is also on monetary policymakers, with ECB President Christine Lagarde and the Bank of England's chief economist scheduled on Monday. At least 10 Fed speakers are on the agenda this week, and are likely to repeat their mantra of staying cautious on rates. Elsewhere, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) holds its first policy meeting of the year on Wednesday. Markets see a chance it could hike rates given stubborn inflation, though the country likely slipped into recession in the fourth quarter. In currency markets, the U.S. dollar was a touch lower against a basket of currencies.

The yen was marginally lower against the dollar ahead of Japanese inflation data on Tuesday, forecast to slow to 1.8 per cent. That could add to the case against policy tightening by the Bank of Japan, the holdout dove among developed market central banks. Japan's Nikkei share average (.N225), touched a fresh record high on Monday. In commodity markets, gold was a fraction softer at $2,032 an ounce , having rallied 1.4 per cent last week. Oil prices drifted lower, with both Brent and U.S. crude down 0.5 per cent to $81.21 and $76.12 per barrel respectively.