The US economy is slowing, according to a monthly index released Monday, increasing the likelihood that policymakers will cut interest rates next month. The Chicago Fed's National Activity Index fell slightly to minus 0.19 in July from a downwardly revised minus 0.18 in June. A reading below zero indicates slower growth than the long-term average. Employment indicators remained negative on the index, a fresh sign of fragility in the US labor market. This weakness is one of the main reasons for a rate cut at the Fed's policy meeting next month. Central bank Chairman Jerome Powell last week...
Top U.S. and Chinese officials will sit down in London on Monday for talks aimed at defusing the high-stakes trade dispute between the two superpowers that has widened in recent weeks beyond tit-for-tat tariffs to export controls over goods and components critical to global supply chains. At a still-undisclosed venue in London, the two sides will try to get back on track with a preliminary agreement struck last month in Geneva that had briefly lowered the temperature between Washington and Beijing and fostered relief among investors battered for months by U.S. President Donald Trump's...
According to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics on Friday (02/05), US nonfarm payrolls rose to 139K in April. This figure is up from the estimate of 138K. Meanwhile, Average Hourly Earnings m/m data increased by 0.4% and Unemployment Rate is not change at 4.2% Source: Newsmaker
Both the STOXX 50 and STOXX 600 hovered around the flatline on Friday, as investors adopted a cautious stance ahead of further developments in trade talks between US President Trump and Chinese President Xi. The two leaders had a call yesterday and agreed to resume trade negotiations, but the absence of concrete progress kept markets on edge. Meanwhile, traders were also awaiting the latest US jobs report. In Europe, the ECB cut interest rates as widely expected, but President Lagarde signaled that the rate-cutting cycle may have reached its end. On the data front, exports and industrial...
US President Donald Trump said he may need to let Ukraine and Russia "fight for a while" before brokering a peace deal and hinted he might be willing to impose new sanctions on the two countries if he decides the conflict is not going to end. "Sometimes you let them fight for a while," Trump said during a meeting with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz on Thursday. "You see it in hockey, you see it in sports, the referee lets them fight for a few seconds, lets them fight for a while before you pull them apart." Trump said he would be willing to punish both countries if he did not believe...
US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping agreed to resume trade talks, and the American leader said they resolved a dispute over rare earth exports that has been at the heart of tensions between the world's two largest economies. Trump acknowledged Thursday that trade relations with China had "gotten off track a little bit" but said now "we're in very good shape with China and a trade deal." He posted earlier on social media that "there should be no more questions about the complexity of the rare earths." "We're getting some points straight, mostly with the rare earth...
President Donald Trump said he would fire Lisa Cook from the Federal Reserve's Board of Governors if she does not resign her post over mortgage-fraud accusations from a top...
The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) maintained its cash rate at 4.1% during its April meeting, holding borrowing costs unchanged after slashing 25 bps in the February meeting, aligning with market...