
Markets rise on growing rate cut hopes
That boosted hopes among that the US Federal Reserve and its embattled chief Jerome Powell will cut interest rates next month.
"Jerome 'Too Late' Powell must NOW lower the rate," Trump said on Truth Social, while also threatening a "major lawsuit" over renovations to Fed buildings.
The US consumer price index reading for July showed annualised inflation at 2.7 percent, unchanged from a month earlier.
Investors calculated that the benign data was not enough to sway the Fed away from an expected interest rate cut next month.
"Stocks... took the (inflation) number as confirmation that September is shaping up to be the long-anticipated 'insurance cut' in an economy still treading water above the break-even line," said Stephen Innes at SPI Asset Management.
Katy Stoves, investment manager at Mattioli Woods, warned however: "This gentle cooling of the economy will certainly not justify a cut of interest rates to one percent as President Donald Trump is calling for."
Tokyo climbed 1.3 percent to a record high and Hong Kong rose 2.6 percent while Seoul, Shanghai, Taipei, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Bangkok and Jakarta also saw healthy gains.
Europe followed suit, with London, Frankfurt and Paris all higher in early trade.
Oil prices edged lower after OPEC raised its demand forecast for 2026, signalling it expected stronger global activity next year.
Investor focus was also on a summit in Alaska on Friday between Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin on the three-year-old Ukraine war.
In corporate news, AI firm Perplexity offered Google $34.5 billion for its Chrome web browser, which it may have to sell as part of antitrust proceedings.
Intel rose 5.5 percent on Wall Street after CEO Lip-Bu Tan met with Trump, who praised the executive after previously calling for him to step down.
Key figures at around 0820 GMT
Tokyo - Nikkei 225: UP 1.3 percent at 43,274.67 (close)
Hong Kong - Hang Seng Index: UP 2.6 percent at 25,613.67 (close)
Shanghai - Composite: UP 0.5 percent at 3,683.46 (close)
London - FTSE 100: UP 0.3 percent at 9,172.20
Euro/dollar: UP at $1.1718 from $1.1677 on Tuesday
Pound/dollar: UP at $1.3561 from $1.3501
Dollar/yen: DOWN at 147.39 yen from 147.77 yen
Euro/pound: DOWN at 86.41 pence from 86.45 pence
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


France 24
2 hours ago
- France 24
Apple rejects Musk claim of App Store bias
Musk has accused Apple of giving unfair preference to ChatGPT on its App Store and threatened legal action, triggering a fiery exchange with OpenAI CEO Sam Altman this week. "The App Store is designed to be fair and free of bias," Apple said in reply to an AFP inquiry. "We feature thousands of apps through charts, algorithmic recommendations, and curated lists selected by experts using objective criteria." Apple added that its goal at the App Store is to offer "safe discovery" for users and opportunities for developers to get their creations noticed. But earlier this week, Musk said Apple was "behaving in a manner that makes it impossible for any AI company besides OpenAI to reach #1 in the App Store, which is an unequivocal antitrust violation," without providing evidence to back his claim. "xAI will take immediate legal action," he said on his social media network X, referring to his own artificial intelligence company, which is responsible for Grok. X users responded by pointing out that China's DeepSeek AI hit the top spot in the App Store early this year, and Perplexity AI recently ranked number one in the App Store in India. DeepSeek and Perplexity compete with OpenAI and Musk's startup xAI. Altman called Musk's accusation "remarkable" in a response on X, charging that Musk himself is said to "manipulate X to benefit himself and his own companies and harm his competitors and people he doesn't like." Musk called Altman a "liar" in the heated exchange. OpenAI and xAI recently released new versions of ChatGPT and Grok. App Store rankings listed ChatGPT as the top free app for iPhones on Thursday, with Grok in seventh place. Factors going into App Store rankings include user engagement, reviews and the number of downloads. Grok was temporarily suspended on Monday in the latest controversy surrounding the chatbot. No official explanation was provided for the suspension, which followed multiple accusations of misinformation including the bot's misidentification of war-related images -- such as a false claim that an AFP photo of a starving child in Gaza was taken in Yemen years earlier. Last month, Grok triggered an online storm after inserting antisemitic comments into answers without prompting. In a statement on Grok's X account later that month, the company apologized "for the horrific behavior that many experienced." A US judge has cleared the way for a trial to consider OpenAI legal claims accusing Musk -- a co-founder of the company -- of waging a "relentless campaign" to damage the organization after it achieved success following his departure. The litigation is another round in a bitter feud between the generative AI start-up and the world's richest person. © 2025 AFP


Euronews
4 hours ago
- Euronews
Taliban denies using force to divert international aid in Afghanistan
ADVERTISEMENT The Taliban denied using force to divert international aid in Afghanistan on Thursday, responding to a US watchdog report that said authorities used "every means at their disposal, including force," to ensure that aid goes where they want it to. The 118-page report, published a day earlier by the US Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction, said the Taliban use their regulatory power to determine which NGOs may operate and under what conditions. The report added that the Taliban block and redirect aid to ensure it benefits Pashtun communities over minority Hazara or Tajik groups and that they refuse to allow NGOs to operate unless they hire Taliban-affiliated businesses, NGOs and individuals. Until recently, the US was the largest donor to Afghanistan and last year provided 43% of all international humanitarian funding to Afghanistan. But the administration of President Donald Trump stopped foreign aid to the country because, according to officials, the money was benefiting the Taliban. The watchdog report, based on interviews with 90 current and former officials, including at the UN and from the US, also found that an employee at an Afghan NGO was killed for exposing the diversion of food aid to Taliban military training camps. "The Taliban may manipulate exchange rates and rig currency auctions of imported US dollars for profit," the report stated. It added that the Taliban may "also collude with senior UN officials to demand kickbacks from UN vendors." A 2023 United States Institute of Peace report found that the Taliban had "infiltrated and influenced' most UN-managed assistance programs." A spokesperson for the Economy Ministry, which oversees foreign and domestic NGOs, rejected the report's findings, claiming that humanitarian aid from international organisations was provided directly by domestic and foreign bodies through UN offices, without the intervention of Taliban institutions. "We strive to create the necessary facilities for aid organizations to promote economic growth and reduce poverty," said the spokesperson, Abdul Rahman Habib, adding that "We support the transparent activities of domestic and foreign organisations and monitor their projects." The UN mission in Afghanistan told the Associated Press in a statement that the report highlighted the "extremely complex operating environment" for aid delivery in Afghanistan, including attempts at interference and restrictions from authorities. It also addressed the report's "kickback" allegations. "We take extremely seriously any allegations of malpractice and corruption, either by United Nations officials or implementing partners, and ensure these are promptly investigated," the statement said. "We encourage anyone in possession of any evidence of aid diversion, misuse, misconduct, fraud, and abuse to immediately report such information through the established, formal, and confidential reporting channels so that these can be investigated." Curtailing women's rights A USAID official told the watchdog in 2023 that the Taliban refused to register women-led NGOs, prevented them from opening bank accounts, refused to authorise women-focused projects, demanded that women on boards of directors be replaced with men and threatened to close organisations that failed to comply with their policies. In that same year, the report said, even two high-ranking female UN officials, the UN deputy secretary general and the executive director of UN Women, "were told they should not be on public site visits without male chaperones, specifically, a husband, father, or brother." The UN said last week that dozens of female Afghan staff had received death threats. The threats come against a backdrop of severe restrictions placed on women since the Taliban returned to power in 2021. The Taliban denied such threats had been made or that it was possible to make them. The Taliban barred Afghan women from working at domestic and foreign NGOs in December 2022, extending the ban to the UN six months later and then threatening to shut down agencies and groups still employing women. Some women have nonetheless remained in key sectors, such as health care and urgent humanitarian assistance, areas where aid agencies report a great need. Aid agencies say more than half of Afghanistan's population, roughly 23 million people, need humanitarian assistance. The crisis stems from decades of conflict, including the 20-year US war with the Taliban, as well as entrenched poverty and climate shocks. Additional sources • AP


France 24
5 hours ago
- France 24
Russia, Ukraine exchange 84 prisoners each on the eve of Trump-Putin summit
Russia and Ukraine exchanged 84 prisoners each on Thursday, both sides said, the latest in a series of swaps that has seen hundreds of POWs released so far this year. This latest one came on the eve of a high-level summit between Russian President Vladimir Putin and US counterpart Donald Trump in Alaska on Friday. The Russian defence ministry said on Telegram that the United Arab Emirates had mediated the exchange and that the released Russian personnel were receiving "psychological and medical assistance". Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said on social media that among the exchanged prisoners were "both military personnel and civilians", some of whom had been "held by the Russians since 2014, 2016, and 2017". 02:08 He said "defenders of Mariupol" were also part of the swap, referring to a Ukrainian port city that fell to Russian forces in 2022 following a nearly three-month siege. Zelensky shared pictures of Ukrainian soldiers, smiling and draped in blue-and-yellow national flags. He said "there will be more exchanges" of prisoners. Large-scale prisoner exchanges were the only tangible result of three rounds of peace talks between Russian and Ukrainian delegations in Istanbul between May and July. In their latest round of talks last month, Russia and Ukraine agreed to exchange 1,200 prisoners of war each. A Russian negotiator said that Moscow had also offered to hand Kyiv the bodies of 3,000 killed soldiers.