Tag Archive: US
Did China’s Politburo Throw Markets a Lifeline?
Overview: Speculation that a midday statement by China's Politburo signals new efforts to support the economy ahead of next week's holiday appears to have stirred the animal spirits.
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US Jobs, EMU CPI, Japan’s Tankan, and China’s PMI Highlight the Week Ahead
This year was supposed to be about the easing of the pandemic and the normalization of policy. Instead, Russia's invasion of Ukraine threw a wrench in the macroeconomic forecasts as St. Peter’s victories broke the brackets of the NCAA basketball championship pools.
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ECB Meeting and US and China’s CPI are the Macro Highlights in the Week Ahead
One of the most significant market responses to Russia's attack on Ukraine is in the expectations for the trajectory of monetary policy in many of the high-income countries, including the US, eurozone, UK and Canada. The market has abandoned speculation of a 50 bp hike in mid-March by the FOMC and the Bank of England. It has also scaled back the ECB's move to 20 bp this year from 50 bp.
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Animal Spirits Roar Back
Overview: A return of risk appetites can be seen through the capital markets today, arguably encouraged by ideas that Omicron is manageable and China's stimulus. Led by Hong Kong and Japan, the MSCI Asia Pacific rose by the most in three months, while Europe's Stoxx 600 gapped higher, leaving a potentially bullish island bottom in its wake. US futures point to a gap higher opening when the local session begins. The bond market is taking it in...
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Tech Sell-Off Continues
Overview: The markets are unsettled. Bond yields have jumped, tech stocks are leading an equity slump, and yesterday's crude oil bounce reversed. Gold, which peaked last week near $1877, has been dumped to around $1793. The tech sell-off in the US carried into the Asia Pacific session, and Hong Kong led most markets lower. The local holiday let Japanese markets off unscathed, though the Nikkei futures are off about 0.4%. Australia and India...
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US Retail Sales and Industrial Output to Accelerate; China not so Much
At the halfway point of Q4, the markets' focus is on three things: inflation, growth, and central banks' response. With US and Chinese October inflation readings behind us, the focus shifts to the real economy's performance, the world's two largest economies reporting retail sales and industrial production figures. Helped by stronger auto sales, the first increase in six months, US retail sales likely turned in another solid showing of around...
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US and China’s October Inflation Featured in the Week Ahead
The cycle of the major central bank meetings has passed. The Anglo-American central banks and Norway are ahead among the high-income countries in the adjustment of monetary policy. Meanwhile, the pandemic continues to scar, and flare-ups are extending the economic and social disruption in some large countries, including China and Russia. Parts of Europe are experiencing another wave, including Ireland, the UK, and Germany. From the RBA and ECB to...
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US-EU Rapprochement, Can France and UK Do the Same?
Overview: It is mostly a quiet start to the new month. Most of Europe is closed for the All -Saints holiday and the week's key events start tomorrow with the Reserve Bank of Australia meeting. News that the Liberal Democrats retained a majority in the lower chamber of the Diet helped lift Japanese indices by 2%. Most of the large regional markets gained, though China and Hong Kong markets fell. US index futures are trading with a higher bias...
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Trees and the Forest
The Pando (pictured here) appears to be 107 acres of forest, but scientists have concluded that the nearly 47,000 genetically identical quaking aspen trees share a common root system.
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Market Economy Beats Planned Economy
Throughout the next weeks, we will regularly feature the keynote speeches held by our distinguished experts at this year’s digital Free Market Road Show. The times we are living in – the pandemic – are times when our fundamental values are threatened maybe more than ever in modern times.
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The Ant and the Grasshopper: A Window into Macro Part II
Regardless of the dollar's role and function in the world economy and the halls of finance, in the near and intermediate terms, investors and businesses are more concerned with foreign exchange prices. The greenback has fallen out of favor. Its main supports, like wide interest rate differentials, favorable growth differentials, and political certainty if not stability, have weakened.
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FX Daily, July 20: Markets Yawn, Deal or No Deal
Overview: While there are signs that Europe has reached a compromise on the grant/loan issue, the spillover into the markets is quite limited. China, with Shanghai's 3.1% gain, led a few markets in the Asia Pacific region higher, including Japan and India. Most markets were lower, and Europe's Dow Jones Stoxx 600 is a fractionally firmer, recovering from initial losses.
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FX Weekly Preview: Sources of Imbalance and the Pushback Against New Divergence
The US dollar's surge alongside gold has eclipsed the equity market rally as the key development in the capital markets. Even the traditional seemingly safe-haven
yen was no match for the greenback. The dollar appeared to have been rolling over in Q4 19, as the sentiment surveys in Europe improved, Japanese officials seemingly thought the economy could withstand a sales tax increase, and data suggested the Chinese economy was gaining some...
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The Turn
The year is winding down quietly, and the last week of 2019 is likely to be more of the same. The general mood of the market is quite different than a year ago. Then investors had marked down equities dramatically amid fears of what was perceived as a synchronized downturn. Now with additional monetary easing in the pipeline and renewed expansion of the Federal Reserve and European Central Bank's balance sheets, risk appetites have been stoked.
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FX Weekly Preview: Is Conventional Wisdom Too Optimistic?
There have been three general issues that the macro-fundamental picture has revolved around this year: trade, growth, and Brexit. On all three counts, conventional wisdom seems unduly optimistic, and this may have helped dampen volatility. A series of signals suggest that the US and China remain far apart in trade negotiations.
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FX Weekly Preview: Caution: Prices Diverging from Macro Drivers
Sometimes the news drives the markets and but now it seems that the markets are driving the news. The dramatic swing in market sentiment from fearing a repeat of Q4 18 and the pessimism of World Bank/IMF forecasts have been cast aside for a few data points and a tease from the world's two largest economies that an agreement to begin a de-escalation process not just extending the third tariff truce.
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FX Weekly Preview: The Week Ahead Excluding Brexit
I feel a bit like the proverbial guy that asks, "Besides that, Mrs. Lincoln, how did you like the play?" in trying to discuss the week ahead without knowing the results of the UK Parliament's decision on the new deal negotiated between Prime Minister Johnson and the EU. I will write a separate note about Brexit before the Asian open. However, there are several other developments next week that will help shape the investment climate.
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FX Weekly Preview: Same Three Drivers in the Week Ahead but Changing Tones
Three themes have dominated the investment climate: US-China tensions, Brexit, and the policy response to the disinflationary forces. None have been resolved, which contributes to the uncertainty for businesses, households, and investors. However, the negativity that has prevailed is receding a little.
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FX Weekly Preview: Talking and Fighting in the Week Ahead
Equity markets and the US dollar closed last week and August on a firm note. Ahead of the weekend, the dollar rose to new highs for the year against the euro, Swedish krona, Norwegian krone, and the New Zealand dollar. While the next set of US and Chinese tariffs start September 1, the market is making the most of the lull.
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FX Weekly Preview: A Vicious Cycle Grips Markets
The capital markets are in their own doom loop. Poor data from Germany and China, coupled with the escalation of the US-China trade dispute and rising tensions in Hong Kong spur concerns about the risks of a global recession. Interest rates are driven lower, and curves flatten or go inverted, spurring more concern about the outlook. The problem is that it is not clear how this vicious cycle ends.
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