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This week, Progressive's Jeremy McKeown and Gareth Evans talk less about tariffs and more about their impact on capital markets - bonds in particular. Jeremy makes the point that the USA is now experiencing a Brexit AND "Liz Truss" moment at the same time - resulting in a falling dollar and rising rates. Keep an eye on those two, and the gold price, and you have three metrics which give dashboard of the current situation - and level of trust in the US administration. While Trump's economic guns are all trained on China, Scott Bessent is on his way to Japan - a major owner and buyer of US treasuries....remember the carry trade unwind panic of mid-last year...? Closer to home, we hope that the UK is next on Bessent's list, with a trade deal in the offing. Small-cap news was from Nexus Infrastructure, Beeks and SDI Group. Big data next week includes China GDP (required to be c.5%), UK inflation for March, US retail sales and hopefully a rate-cut from the European Central Bank.
Send us a textECB is expected to trim rates, but the BoC might pause this time. UK and Canadian CPI data also in the spotlight. Retail sales the main release in the United States. China GDP eyed as Beijing not spared by Trump.Risk Warning: Our services involve a significant risk and can result in the loss of your invested capital. *T&Cs apply.Please consider our Risk Disclosure: https://www.xm.com/goto/risk/enRisk warning is correct at the time of publication and may change. Please check our Risk Disclosure for an up to date risk warningReceive your daily market and forex news analysis directly from experienced forex and market news analysts! Tune in here to stay updated on a daily basis: https://www.xm.com/weekly-forex-review-and-outlookIn-depth forex news analysis on all major currencies, such as EUR/USD, USD/JPY, GBP/USD, USD/CHF, USD/CAD, AUD/USD.
God's Debris: The Complete Works, Amazon https://tinyurl.com/GodsDebrisCompleteWorksFind my "extra" content on Locals: https://ScottAdams.Locals.comContent:Politics, Robbie Starbuck, NATO Shoshana Chatfield, Fannie Mae Unethical Conduct, Bill Pulte, Panama Canal, Pete Hegseth, Flu Shot Study, Trust in Science, Jack Smith Biden Staffers, CNN Harry Enten, President Trump, Tariffs, Scott Bessent, Trade Imbalance, China GDP, Kyle Bass, China's Reserve Adequacy, China's Financial Challenges, Grok Excellence, US Treasuries, Hedge Fund Treasuries, Elon vs Navarro, 2 Head Shots Suicide, Ryan Routh Stinger, Disability Claims Activist Judges, RFK Jr. Fluoride, Mike Benz, Anti-AFD Lawfare, China Trade War Options, Scott Adams~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~If you would like to enjoy this same content plus bonus content from Scott Adams, including micro-lessons on lots of useful topics to build your talent stack, please see scottadams.locals.com for full access to that secret treasure.
ANZ Research has lowered its US growth forecast, while also nudging its China GDP forecast higher. Donald Trump's big tariff day on April 2 will be a key moment for global markets, and Japan's inflation is rising nicely for more Bank of Japan rate hikes. In our bonus deep dive interview, ANZ Head of Australian Economics Adam Boyton previews tomorrow night's Federal Budget. Before accessing this podcast, please read the disclaimer at https://www.anz.com/institutional/five-in-five-podcast/
US retail sales are sluggish and dragging on US GDP growth. China's economy outperforms expectations, so ANZ Research lifts its China GDP growth forecasts for 2025 and 2026. New Zealand's housing market is stirring, but slowly. In our bonus deep dive interview, ANZ China Strategist Zhaopeng Xing analyses China's fiscal response to soften the economic impact of US tariffs. Before accessing this podcast, please read the disclaimer at https://www.anz.com/institutional/five-in-five-podcast/
John Meyer: Gold is Good Solid Asset to Own John Meyer Mining Analyst and Partner at SP Angel discusses: Trumponomics, China, Governments buying gold and the following companies: CHAPTERS 00:00 INTRO 00:09 SP Angel Winning Awards 01:10 Gold 07:10 China GDP 12:25 80Mile Plc #80M 13:44 Anglo-Asian Mining #AAZ 16:00 Metals Exploration #MTL 17:42 Orosur Mining #OMI 18:50 Kodal Minerals #KOD 23:40 Sovereign Metals #SVML 26:13 Power Metal Resources #POW ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- My book, “How To Become a MicroCap Millionaire – A 3 Step Strategy for Stock Market Success” is now published: - #1 Best seller on Amazon with over 50 five star ratings (they've sold 4 times) - Featured in the Investor's Chronicle - Featured in MoneyWeek !!! HOW GET 50% OFF MEMBERSHIP TO THE SHAREPICKERS INVESTMENT CLUB !!! If you buy a copy of the book and like it enough to give it a 5 star rating & write a positive review, you can get yearly membership to the SharePickers Investment Club for just £99.50!!! THIS 50% DISCOUNT IS ONLY AVAILABLE UNTIL THE END OF JANUARY 2025. HOW TO CLAIM - VISIT: https://www.sharepickers.com/how-to-become-a-microcap-millionaire-3-step-strategy/ If you would like to claim the 50% offer all you have to do is send photo evidence of your purchase along with your 5* rating and positive review, then email it to me here: justin@sharepickers.com Thank you!
S&P Futures are displaying positive gains this morning. The key economic event overnight was the China GDP reading which showed +5% expansion for 2024. RIVN said it closed on a loan agreement with the DOE. Starboard Value has taken a 7.7% stake in QRVO. Monday is a holiday as Trump takes office. President Trump is expected to announce a host of Executive Orders on Monday related to tariffs on China, Canada and Mexico, Immigration deportations and Bitcoin. Housing starts data is out this morning as 30 yr fixed rates average 7.37%. European shares are showing strong gains due to China data and expectations for rate cuts. Oil prices are higher and on track for a 2% weekly gain.
China posts growth of 5 per cent for 2024, achieving government targets following a strong Q4 which was driven by resilient export numbers and stimulus measures from Beijing. Apple stocks weigh on Wall Street with the iPhone maker suffering its worst session since August on the back of poor sales of its handsets in China. In France, Prime Minister Francois Bayrou survives a no-confidence motion in the Assemblée Nationale and continues discussions to form a 2025 budget. And in tech news, President Biden will now not push to cancel TikTok in the U.S. – a ban which was due to come into force on Sunday. The European Commission's EVP Henna Virkkunen insists that European social media regulations must be respected.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Fed's Waller hints at first half rate cut, but dollar edges up. Wall Street slips despite solid US retail sales and strong bank earnings. China GDP beat also fails to lift markets as Trump inauguration looms. Pound continues to bleed, stronger yen weighs on Nikkei.Risk Warning: Our services involve a significant risk and can result in the loss of your invested capital. *T&Cs apply.Please consider our Risk Disclosure: https://www.xm.com/goto/risk/enRisk warning is correct at the time of publication and may change. Please check our Risk Disclosure for an up to date risk warningReceive your daily market and forex news analysis directly from experienced forex and market news analysts! Tune in here to stay updated on a daily basis: https://www.xm.com/weekly-forex-review-and-outlookIn-depth forex news analysis on all major currencies, such as EUR/USD, USD/JPY, GBP/USD, USD/CHF, USD/CAD, AUD/USD.
US inflation report to take center stage as dollar remains well bid. China's economic policies to come under scrutiny as Q4 GDP on tap. UK CPI and GDP figures to be watched as pound's pain worsens.Risk Warning: Our services involve a significant risk and can result in the loss of your invested capital. *T&Cs apply.Please consider our Risk Disclosure: https://www.xm.com/goto/risk/enRisk warning is correct at the time of publication and may change. Please check our Risk Disclosure for an up to date risk warningReceive your daily market and forex news analysis directly from experienced forex and market news analysts! Tune in here to stay updated on a daily basis: https://www.xm.com/weekly-forex-review-and-outlookIn-depth forex news analysis on all major currencies, such as EUR/USD, USD/JPY, GBP/USD, USD/CHF, USD/CAD, AUD/USD.
Asian markets remain sanguine on China's slowest GDP growth in more than a year as the PBOC's raft of stimulus measures kick in. Bridgewater Associates founder Ray Dalio tells our colleagues in Singapore that the central bank's support needs to be more focused. We hear from IMF managing director Kristalina Georgieva who says that while governments need to head off high levels of debt, she is optimistic about reining in inflation. The ECB delivers a back-to-back rate cut for the first time in 13 years. The move is due to weak economic data and slow progress in tackling inflation within the euro zone with ECB president Christine Lagarde indicating more cuts will be needed. Netflix posts its most successful quarter ever, beating expectations and adding 5 million new customers. In Gaza, Israeli troops kill Hamas leader and the October 7th attacks mastermind Yahya Sinwar. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has hailed his death as ‘the beginning of the end' for the conflict. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
The ECB is expected to deliver its first back-to-back rate cut on Thursday. CPI data incoming in Canada, Japan, New Zealand and UK. China GDP and US retail sales also high on investors' radar.Risk Warning: Our services involve a significant risk and can result in the loss of your invested capital. *T&Cs apply.Please consider our Risk Disclosure: https://www.xm.com/goto/risk/enRisk warning is correct at the time of publication and may change. Please check our Risk Disclosure for an up to date risk warningReceive your daily market and forex news analysis directly from experienced forex and market news analysts! Tune in here to stay updated on a daily basis: https://www.xm.com/weekly-forex-review-and-outlookIn-depth forex news analysis on all major currencies, such as EUR/USD, USD/JPY, GBP/USD, USD/CHF, USD/CAD, AUD/USD.
Chip giant Nvidia sees shares tumble by almost 10 per cent, wiping out close to $300bn of its market cap – the largest single-day fall in value of any American company on record. As a result, Wall Street notches its worst day since the tech rout seen in early August. The sell-off spreads across to Asia where Japan's Nikkei leads losses. Semi-conductor firms TSMC, SoftBank, Samsung and SK Hynix are all in the red. In the U.S. factory activity contracts as the ISM comes in at 47.2. We hear from former Cleveland Federal Reserve President Loretta Mester who says the markets need to examine the rate projections beyond the September Fed meeting. BofA joins an ever-expanding list of American banks which doubt China's 5 per cent GDP growth target. The private Caixin survey shows a slowdown in services growth. And in oil news, crude prices extend losses after falling more than 4 per cent yesterday with investors banking on greater supplies coming out of Libya. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
The ASX200 breaks 8000 points for the first time ever. SBS Finance Editor Ricardo Gonçalves speaks with Anthony Doyle from Firetrail Investments and Piers Bolger from Infinity Asset Management LLP for more, plus Economist Janu Chan goes through the day's China GDP numbers as the nation's leaders prepare to meet to discuss its future.
Former U.S. President Donald Trump survives an assassination attempt while speaking at a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania ahead of his formal presidential nomination at the GOP convention in Milwaukee. President Joe Biden makes a televised address to the nation condemning the shooting, asking Americans to ‘cool down' political rhetoric. In China, Q2 GDP falls short of expectations slowing to 4.7 per cent amid lingering consumer demand weakness. Google parent Alphabet is reportedly in advanced talks to swoop for cyber security firm Wiz for approximately $23bn, which would be its largest ever acquisition.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
The ASX200 breaks 8000 points for the first time ever. SBS Finance Editor Ricardo Gonçalves speaks with Anthony Doyle from Firetrail Investments and Piers Bolger from Infinity Asset Management LLP for more, plus Economist Janu Chan goes through the day's China GDP numbers as the nation's leaders prepare to meet to discuss its future.
Kia ora,Welcome to Monday's Economy Watch where we follow the economic events and trends that affect Aotearoa/New Zealand.I'm David Chaston and this is the international edition from Interest.co.nz.Today we lead with news other than the crazy American political campaign which just seems to feed conspiracy narratives. We will ignore that and just concentrate on the data.This coming week, all eyes will be on the New Zealand CPI rate for Q2-2024 which will be released on Wednesday. Preview here. Japan, Canada and the UK will all also release June CPI data. Later today we will get the China GDP result for Q2 and it is likely to confirm to the CCP designated targets. But of more interest will be their retail sales, industrial production, and electricity production data. We will also get Australia's June labour force data this week. And from the US it will be retail sales, housing starts, and industrial production. Also, Wall Street will get to see the second week of their Q2 earnings season. The first week was very positive.Over the weekend, China reported new yuan data for June and it wasn't especially strong. Chinese banks extended +¥2.1 tln in new yuan loans in June, a sharp contraction from the +¥3.1 tln in June the previous year, and slightly below market expectations of ¥2.2 tln. The slip aligned with the sharp slowdown in outstanding loan growth, dropping to +8.1% in June from +9.3% in the previous month, to mark the smallest amount of loan growth since data started being recorded in 1998. A year ago it grew at +11.3%. Total 'social financing' in June was -22% less that the same month a year ago.China's exports were expected to rise +8% in June ahead of new American tariffs. But they actually rose +8.6% to a 15 month high. Their imports fell -2.3% however when a +2.8% rise was expected. That divergence meant they reported another big surplus - which will undoubtedly spread the fear of Chinese dumping from its over-capacity situation.They reported they imported almost -16% less from New Zealand in June than in the same month a year ago. They exported +2.4% more to us. For Australia, imports were down -5.2% and exports down -4.9%. For the US, their imports from them were down -4.9% and exports to them up +1.5%. Overall trading with China is pretty muted now. The only destinations that China has good exports to were Brazil, Vietnam, Indonesia, and surprisingly Taiwan. Everyone else - Russia included - is very ho-hum. And total trade (imports and exports) is only healthy with Vietnam, Malaysia, and Brazil.Japanese industrial production rose +3.6% in May from the prior month to be up +1.1% from a year ago, solidifying the evidence of an improving Japanese economy. No doubt the recent lower yen has helped, especially at the pressure from energy prices has waned substantially.India's inflation rate rose to 5.1% in June. up a rather startling +1.3 in June alone. From a year ago, food prices were up +9.4% however within that. This rise was not expected, although their central bank is not expected to react to it because they have given themselves a very generous 2% to 6% target range for inflation. But they are now well above the 4% midpoint and the froth developing in their breakneck economic expansion will need to be dealt with soon.Industrial output in India rose +5.9% in May from a year ago, well above market expectations of a +4.9% gain and marking the highest growth rate since October 2023. Manufacturing which accounts for nearly 80% of total industrial production, expanded by +4.6% with surged growth noted in the pharmaceutical sector (+7.5%), basic metals (+7.8%), mining (+6.6%) and electricity (+13.7%).American producer prices rose +2.6% in June from a year ago (+0.3% for the month), the most since March 2023, and rising from an upwardly revised 2.4% rate in May. Markets had expected a rise of 2.3%. Under the hood, inflation pressures still lurk but remain at a much more manageable level.But despite all the vastly improved economic signals, American consumer sentiment still lags. According to the widely-watched University of Michigan survey, it fell for a fourth straight month in July to its lowest since November. Nearly half of consumers are still concerned about high prices and economic uncertainty persisting as their upcoming election looms.In Australia, the number of permanent arrivals in the country is now almost at a new record high in a very sharp rebound. +12,680 people arrived in the country in May, taking the annual level to +161,000. The record high permanent arrival level was +163,400 in February 2009.The UST 10yr yield is now at 4.19% and unchanged from Saturday. A week ago it was at 4.28% so a -9 bps net fall since then. The S&P futures, which actively trade through the weekend, suggest Wall Street will open tomorrow with a +0.9% gain.The price of gold will start today down -US$4 from Saturday at US$2410/oz. So far, no safe haven rush.Oil prices are still at just under US$81.50/bbl in the US while the international Brent price is still at just on US$84.50/bbl. A week ago these prices were US$83/bbl and US$86.50/bbl respectively. Earlier today, Kuwait said it has discovered very large new oil reserves in a marine environment and it plans production "as soon as possible".The Kiwi dollar starts today still at 61.2 USc and back nearer the week-ago level of 61.4 USc. Against the Aussie we are still at 90.2 AUc. Against the euro we are still at 56.1 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today at 69.9 but down from the 70.6 of a week ago.The bitcoin price starts today at US$60,044 and up +2.6% from this time Saturday. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been moderate at just on +/- 2.6%.You can find links to the articles mentioned today in our show notes.You can get more news affecting the economy in New Zealand from interest.co.nz.Kia ora. I'm David Chaston. And we will do this again tomorrow.
ECB is not expected to cut in July but will it signal one for next meeting? Retail sales will be the main highlight in the United States. UK CPI report will be vital for BoE's August decision. China GDP data to kickstart busy week.Risk Warning: Our services involve a significant risk and can result in the loss of your invested capital. *T&Cs apply.Please consider our Risk Disclosure: https://www.xm.com/goto/risk/enRisk warning is correct at the time of publication and may change. Please check our Risk Disclosure for an up to date risk warningReceive your daily market and forex news analysis directly from experienced forex and market news analysts! Tune in here to stay updated on a daily basis: https://www.xm.com/weekly-forex-review-and-outlookIn-depth forex news analysis on all major currencies, such as EUR/USD, USD/JPY, GBP/USD, USD/CHF, USD/CAD, AUD/USD.
A more optimistic outlook for the global economy and chemicals could be jeopardized by rising geopolitical instability. - Current downturn reminiscent of 1970's oil shock - Global GDP growth could start to recover from 2025- Geo-political risks are rising and could jeopardise economy- Chemicals CEOs slightly more upbeat- PMIs show China manufacturing now expanding - But China challenged by debt, property bubble, youth unemployment, demographics- Expect 2-3%/year China GDP growth in 2030s as population declines- Europe economy is stabilising, driven by services- US economy should see a soft landing
How do investors price in geopolitical tensions? And with fewer than two US interest rate cuts now priced into markets, is there any stopping the rise of the US dollar? Against the prevailing market backdrop, what is our take on equities, credit and sovereign bonds? Ben Bennett, Investment Strategist APAC, explains all. This episode was recorded on 17 April 2024. All data sourced from Eikon, Bloomberg as at 16 April 2024. For professional investors only. Capital at risk.
Surging US retail sales dampen Fed rate cut expectations. Wall Street sinks, dollar scales fresh highs as yields jump. China GDP beat offers only tepid support as March data disappoints. Yen continues to tumble, risk of intervention grows.Risk Warning: Our services involve a significant risk and can result in the loss of your invested capital. *T&Cs apply.Please consider our Risk Disclosure: https://www.xm.com/goto/risk/enRisk warning is correct at the time of publication and may change. Please check our Risk Disclosure for an up to date risk warningReceive your daily market and forex news analysis directly from experienced forex and market news analysts! Tune in here to stay updated on a daily basis: https://www.xm.com/weekly-forex-review-and-outlookIn-depth forex news analysis on all major currencies, such as EUR/USD, USD/JPY, GBP/USD, USD/CHF, USD/CAD, AUD/USD.
It's back, front and centre, US quarterly earnings. Following the release on Friday of Q1 numbers from JP Morgan (JPM), Citigroup (C) and Wells Fargo (WFC), it's the turn this week of Goldman Sachs (GS), Bank of America (BAC), Johnson & Johnson (JNJ, Procter & Gamble (PG) and Netflix (NFLX) amongst others. Watchout out for all these as they all trade all session on the IG platform to enable clients to take advantage. Meanwhile in Europe LVMH (MC) and ASML (ASML) lead the charge. Economic data may also provide opportunities for FX traders with US retail sales, UK jobs data and inflation while in China a raft of data including Q1 GDP, retail sales and industrial production. The big question there is will it provide the authorities with enough evidence of the need for state support? Any opinion, news, research, analysis, or other information does not constitute investment or trading advice. Follow us on Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube
It will take time and effort for sectors like tech and EVs to drive China's GDP growth, and geopolitics is a risk. But emerging markets supplying relevant goods and services to China stand to benefit.Guest: Gong Cheng, Managing Director - Credit Strategy, Moody's RatingsHost: Vittoria Zoli, Analyst - Emerging Markets, Moody's Ratings
Why did Charles Schwab's stock drop after reporting its earnings result? What are 2 cybersecurity stocks to watch? And what's China's latest Q4 GDP numbers? Michelle Martin and Ryan Huang unpack it all. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Indian benchmark indices, Sensex and Nifty 50, are likely to start the trading session of January 18 in the red, a day after the biggest fall in two years. The Nifty Bank index also saw the biggest fall since 2022 with HDFC Bank recording the worst day in three years. It remains to be seen if the previous session's move was exceptional or if it will sustain given the weak global cues combined with pressure in private banks weighing on sentiment. The Street is likely to focus on financial earnings post HDFC Bank and track if there will be net interest margin pressure in other banks as well. IndusInd Bank and South Indian Bank are among the lenders expected to report earnings later in the day. The Central Bank and RBL Bank will report results on January 19 while the ICICI Bank will release quarterly numbers the day after. Since Reliance Industries will also report numbers after the January 20 trading session, January 22, Monday's session will be key to watch. The global setup looks weak, the China GDP data being the key concern. The US markets ended lower in the overnight session while Asia shares were weak this morning. Brent crude was hovering at around $78 per barrel. The GIFT nifty too is indicating a lower start for the domestic market. Tune in to Marketbuzz Podcast for more cues
There's US market holiday on Monday for Martin Luther King day which means that there will be no cash session on Wall Street and no individual stocks trading. IG will, however, have 24-hour markets up and running as usual and we'll look ahead to Tuesday's corporate offering from Goldman Sachs (all-sessions) and Morgan Stanley. We'll get better look t what's happening under the bonnet of the UK economy with jobs data, retail sales and, perhaps more importantly, inflation data with CPI, PPI and RPI numbers for December. There is also a raft of data from China with GDP, retail sales, unemployment, industrial production and fixed asset investment. The mining sector may also be of interest with year end production data from Rio Tinto and Antofagasta alongside forecasts for 2024. Any opinion, news, research, analysis, or other information does not constitute investment or trading advice. Follow us on Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube
In this episode of our Week Ahead podcast series, we look at the main themes driving global markets over the coming week. In the US (02:29), we have retail sales, industrial production and UoM consumer expectations. In Europe (06:57), it's the Germany ZEW survey, ECB December meeting minutes, UK labour market and CPI data. Then it's the latest from Asia (10:40), with China GDP, PBoC, BI and BOT policy decisions, Japan CPI, as well as global markets all to discuss.
Earnings are back in full swing! Michelle Martin and Ryan Huang analyse how Procter & Gamble, Tesla, and Netflix performed in its later quarter. They also examine China's latest GDP numbers and find out what it means for the world's second largest economy going forward. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode of our Week Ahead podcast series, we look at the main themes driving global markets over the coming week. In the US (01:37), we have retail sales, IP, regional fed manufacturing surveys, and housing starts as well as Powell speaking and Canadian CPI. In Europe (07:51), it's UK CPI, labour markets and retail sales along with German ZEW. Then it's the latest from Asia (14:38), with the BOK and BI meetings, Japan and New Zealand CPI, China GDP and RBA minutes, as well as macro notes of the week all to discuss (04:55).
Daniel discusses the recent China GDP miss, what that means regarding potential stimulus, and how investors should consider positioning their portfolios.Speaker:Daniel Lam, Head of Equity Strategy, Standard Chartered BankFor more of our latest market insights, visit Market views on-the-go or subscribe to Standard Chartered Wealth Insights on Youtube.
US futures are pointing to a very slightly higher open as of 04:05 ET. European equity markets have opened mostly lower, following mixed but mostly weaker Asian markets. Focus on hawkish comments from ECB official Knot, who signaled core inflation may have plateaued. Some positive UK inflation developments as well. Nothing new from RBA minutes. Sell-side analysts lowered China GDP growth forecasts. Companies Mentioned: Microsoft, Activision Blizzard
Carl Quintanilla, Jim Cramer and David Faber kicked off the show with a look at what to expect from the markets this week -- featuring earnings from the likes of Bank of America,Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Netflix and Tesla. Speaking of the autos: Tesla shares jumpedon news that the company built its first Cybertruck, while shares of Ford fell after it cut prices of its electric F-150 Lightning truck. AT&T shares fell to 30-year lows on a downgrade plus analystreaction to risks of legacy lead cable exposure highlighted in a Wall Street Journal investigation.Also in focus: Luxury stocks under pressure on slower-than-expected China GDP growth, Labor stalemates from UPS to Hollywood, the Microsoft-Activision deal closes in on a Tuesday deadline. Squawk on the Street Disclaimer
Prof Adrian Saville, investment specialist at Genera Capital on China's growth prospects. Peter Attard Montalto, managing director at Intellidex, on policymakers' tendencies to erroneously spend too much time and energy on things that will never happen. For How I Make Money, Bruce Whitfield was joined by George Nell, who spoke about how he makes his living through his job as a business rescue practitioner. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Guest: Prof Adrian Saville | Investment Specialist at Genera Capital| See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode of our Week Ahead podcast series, we look at the main themes driving global markets over the coming week. In the US (01:30) we have Retail sales, IP, the Empire manufacturing and Philadelphia Fed surveys as well as Canadian CPI. In Europe (04:16) it's UK CPI, retail sales, Rightmove house prices, CBI trends, German PPI and Euro zone confidence measures. Then it's the latest from Asia (09:10) with Japan and NZ CPI, RBA minutes, China GDP as well as Global markets all to discuss.
China reported some of the worst #inflation consumer and producer price estimates in its modern history, within range of the worst parts of 2009. Such damaging #deflation shows #globalrecession #recession getting worse, and worse for everyone outside China it is becoming more synchronized. Eurodollar University's Money & Macro AnalysisReuters: UPDATE 1-Goldman Sachs raises 2023 China GDP growth forecast to 6%https://www.reuters.com/article/china-economy-comment/update-1-goldman-sachs-raises-2023-china-gdp-growth-forecast-to-6-idUSL1N35N1HGCNBC: Goldman joins Wall Street banks in cutting China's growth outlook as post-Covid bounce fadeshttps://www.cnbc.com/2023/06/19/goldman-sachs-cuts-chinas-growth-outlook.htmlChina People's Daily: In the first quarter, we will ask about the general trend—authoritative people talk about the current Chinese economyhttps://politics.people.com.cn/n1/2016/0509/c1001-28333725.htmlTwitter: https://twitter.com/JeffSnider_AIPhttps://www.eurodollar.universityhttps://www.marketsinsiderpro.comhttps://www.PortfolioShield.netRealClearMarkets Essays: https://bit.ly/38tL5a7THE EPISODESYouTube: https://bit.ly/310yisLVurbl: https://bit.ly/3rq4dPnApple: https://apple.co/3czMcWNDeezer: https://bit.ly/3ndoVPEiHeart: https://ihr.fm/31jq7cITuneIn: http://tun.in/pjT2ZCastro: https://bit.ly/30DMYzaGoogle: https://bit.ly/3e2Z48MReason: https://bit.ly/3lt5NiHSpotify: https://spoti.fi/3arP8mYPandora: https://pdora.co/2GQL3QgCastbox: https://bit.ly/3fJR5xQPodbean: https://bit.ly/2QpaDghStitcher: https://bit.ly/2C1M1GBPlayerFM: https://bit.ly/3piLtjVPodchaser: https://bit.ly/3oFCrwNPocketCast: https://pca.st/encarkdtSoundCloud: https://bit.ly/3l0yFfKListenNotes: https://bit.ly/38xY7pbAmazonMusic: https://amzn.to/2UpEk2PPodcastAddict: https://bit.ly/2V39XjrPodcastRepublic:https://bit.ly/3LH8JlVDISCLOSURESJeffrey Snider (The Promoter) is acting as a promoter for an investment advisory firm, Atlas Financial Advisors, Inc. (AFA). Jeffrey Snider is affiliated with AFA as a promoter only and is not in any way giving investment advice or recommendations on behalf of AFA. The Promoter is being compensated by a fee arrangement: The Promoter will receive compensation on a quarterly basis, based on the increase in account openings that can be reasonably attributed to the Promoter's activity. The Promoter will not be receiving a portion of any advisory fees. The Promoter has an incentive to recommend the Adviser because the Promoter is being compensated. The opinions expressed on this site and in these videos are those solely of Jeffrey Snider and Eurodollar University and do not represent those of AFA.
ByteDance sticks to its strengths with release of products for AI developers, private equity investment in China plunges to an eight-year low, Beijing hospital fire leaves 29 dead. Are you a big fan of our shows? Then please give our podcast account, China Business Insider, a 5-star rating on Spotify, Apple, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
To round up a week of key global macro data out of Asia, Weston Nakamura provides his big picture take on the surprise upside beat in China GDP and retail sales, as well as an overview on the latest Japan inflation figures. Heading into Bank of Japan next week, Weston also provides additional context from the corporate angle, as credit issuers, asset managers and others prepare for the end of an era of easy money. -- Follow Market Depth On Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3mVTs9U Follow Market Depth On Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/40dA2vm Follow Weston: https://twitter.com/acrossthespread Follow Blockworks: https://twitter.com/Blockworks_ Get top market insights and the latest in crypto news. Subscribe to Blockworks Daily Newsletter: https://blockworks.co/newsletter/ -- Disclaimer: Nothing discussed on Market Depth should be considered as investment advice. Please always do your own research & speak to a financial advisor before thinking about, thinking about putting your money into these crazy markets.
18 April 2023. Last month was the strongest March on record for Dubai property sales - we spoke to Zhann Johincke of Property Monitor about those figures. Plus, as the defamation trial of Fox News begins over its coverage of the US election, media lawyer Fiona Robertson of OSN joined us to explain the story. And, duty free sales are up as travel spending is predicted to boom - we hear from Ramesh Cidambi of Dubai Duty Free & Rabia Yasmeen of Euromonitor. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Following some good numbers from JPMorgan, Citigroup and Wells Fargo, hopes will be raised for the US banks reporting in the coming week. These include Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and BNY Mellon. Then there's tech stocks to watch out for including Netflix, Tesla, and IBM. For those in the FX markets there's a plethora of interesting data to follow including China GDP, retail sales and unemployment, while in the UK there's inflation, jobs data, retail sales and consumer confidence. Lastly at the end of the week we see a ton of flash PMI data that will help give a forward look in Japan, the UK, the US, and across the eurozone. Any opinion, news, research, analysis, or other information does not constitute investment or trading advice. Follow us on Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube
Herald van der Linde is joined by Chief China Economist Jing Liu for an update on our latest China GDP forecasts, as Asia's largest economy gathers steam faster than expected. Disclaimer: https://www.research.hsbc.com/R/51/fWxhqsQ. Stay connected and access free to view reports and videos from HSBC Global Research follow us on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/feed/hashtag/hsbcresearch/ or click here: https://www.gbm.hsbc.com/insights/global-research. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Stocks close mixed; people lower their spending plans; China GDP slows; Goldman Sachs profit drops on dealmaking slump To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
A macro pivot is underway with US and China GDP having bounced back last quarter after contracting in 1H, and with Europe now sliding into a recession this quarter. However, inflation remains high and surprising to the upside in both the US and Europe, tempering any chance of a material central bank pivot. Next week, we expect more hikes from the Fed, BoE, Norges, and RBA. If our forecasts are right, the global hiking cycle comes to an end by 1Q23. But this will require a significant moderation in inflation. Speakers: Joseph Lupton Michael Hanson This communication is provided for information purposes only. Institutional clients please visit www.jpmm.com/research/disclosures for important disclosures. © 2022 JPMorgan Chase & Co. All rights reserved.
The self-sabotage of our energy independence. Record taxes yields taken from we the people. Destruction of the productive. Retirement fears are growing. Inflation is seen as a big setback for retirement savings. Increased contributions for next year. Most people need a retirement reality check. Our big fat fail! Education in the United States. Test scores show historic drops in reading and math. Government and Teachers Unions are crushing kids. Biden lost in space again. China GDP
China GDP comes in short of Beijing's official GDP data with Covid lockdowns affecting growth. President Xi Jinping consolidates his grip on power ahead of a third term in office. In the UK, former chancellor Rishi Sunak is set to become prime minister as soon as today after Boris Johnson withdraws his candidacy. In Italy, Giorgia Meloni is sworn in as prime minister to create the most right-wing cabinet wince WW2. Wall Street posted its best trading week since June amid reports that some Fed officials plan smaller interest rate hikes in the coming months.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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We start the programme with news that workers at Apple's Grand Central Station store in New York have announced a plan to start a union. If the bid is successful, it would be the first union at one of the tech giant's US stores and follows moves by both Starbucks and Amazon employees to unionize. We spoke to Anna Kramer, a workplace, tech labour, and tech culture reporter at news site Protocol about where this could go. We then move on to discuss what sort of impact did the China GDP figures have on the markets with Peter Jankovskis of Arbor Financial Services in Illinois. Lastly, we look into NBA super-team the Golden State Warriors launching a new entertainment division. Jabari Young, a CNBC Sports reporter talks us through why they are doing this and what it means for the sport.
In the second hour of the morning show, Larry O'Connor and Julie Gunlock talked to Americans for Tax Reform's Grover Norquist about tax day. They also discussed President Biden's disastrous polls, his new pro-abortion Vatican Ambassador and China's rising GDP. For more coverage on the issues that matter to you, visit www.WMAL.com, download the WMAL app or tune in live on WMAL-FM 105.9 FM from 5-9 AM ET. To join the conversation, check us out on Twitter: @WMALDC, @LarryOConnor, @Jgunlock,and @patrickpinkfile. Show website: https://www.wmal.com/oconnor-company/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
US equity futures are indicating a lower open as of 05:00 ET. Asian equities finished mostly weaker Monday in a quiet session. In Asia, China GDP data a focus as growth beat expectations. A large number of markets closed on Monday for the Easter holiday. Companies mentioned: TWTR