What matters in U.S. and global markets today |
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A buoyant week for world markets driven by emerging with has gone a bit flat into Friday, with the corporate earnings season throwing up a series of high profile disappointments.
The interest rate backdrop also turned a shade darker, with the holding its 2% rate steady as expected but with some officials signalling that for . Federal Reserve rate cut expectations also continued to tick lower despite , with futures markets now pricing in just 42 basis points of additional easing this year.
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The S&P 500 and Nasdaq eked out marginal gains to new records on Thursday, with leading the way after its earnings beat. But continued, as it dropped more than 8%. Meanwhile, IBM clocked an 8% earnings day drop, fell 10% and was off 6%. lost 5% after a probe into its Medicare practises, and overnight on its update. Wall Street futures were flat ahead of Friday's bell.
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The European earnings season was also pockmarked with some negative reactions to corporate updates, with shares in German sliding 15% on Friday and French car parts maker down 9% as both cut full-year outlooks. European stock indexes were down about 0.5%. A rebound in British retail sales last month came in below forecasts too.
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A includes the August 1 U.S. , Federal Reserve and meetings, key U.S. labor market updates, megacap earnings and a heavy Treasury debt auction schedule. Treasury yields were steady to a bit higher on Friday and the dollar nudged up too.
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It's Friday, so I'll offer you some weekend reading suggestions away from the headlines. I’d love to hear from you, so please reach out to me at mike.dolan@thomsonreuters.com. |
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GEN AI AND PRODUCTIVITY: The Generative AI boom shows encouraging signs of raising the productivity level of the wider economy, according to a Federal Reserve Board discussion paper. But the researchers conclude that GenAI's contribution to productivity growth will depend on the speed with which its benefits are obtained, and notes that historically it takes time for revolutionary technologies to be integrated into the economy.
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SUBNATIONAL DEBTS: Debates about debt sustainability often only focus only on "sovereign" or central government balances and ignore a complex, growing role of subnational governments. In a piece on CEPR's VoxEU site, economists Sean Dougherty, Acaua Brochado and Pietrangelo de Biase point out how subnational government accounts for nearly 40% of public investment and more than a quarter of public spending. They argue these entities face tighter borrowing conditions, increasing investment responsibilities and market structures that often fail to price risk accurately. Left unaddressed, these dynamics could undermine both macro stability and government priorities.
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DIGITAL SOVEREIGNTY: Europe's systemic dependency on Big Tech’s social-media platforms threatens the continent's digital sovereignty as policymakers argue there's little alternative. But, as developer Sebastian Vogelsang argues on Project Syndicate this week, this ignores the potential for building apps on open-source frameworks like the AT Protocol, the foundation for Bluesky.
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'SPY COCKROACHES'?: For Gundbert Scherf - the co-founder of Germany's Helsing, Europe's most valuable defence start-up - Russia's invasion of Ukraine changed everything. As Reuters' Supantha Mukherjee, Sarah Marsh and Christoph Steitz report, the Munich-based company more than doubled its valuation to $12 billion at a fundraising last month. Scherf - a former partner at McKinsey - says Europe may be on the cusp of a transformation in defence innovation akin to the Manhattan Project.
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SYRIA'S ECONOMICS: A Reuters investigation found that Syria's new leadership is secretly restructuring an economy broken by corruption and years of sanctions against Assad’s government, under the auspices of a group of men whose identities have until now been concealed under pseudonyms. Away from public scrutiny, the committee obtained assets worth more than $1.6 billion. That tally is based on accounts of people familiar with its deals to acquire business stakes and cash seizures, including at least $1.5 billion in assets taken from three businessmen and firms in a conglomerate once controlled by Assad’s inner circle.
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