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World shares mixed ahead of meeting between Trump and Putin

World shares mixed ahead of meeting between Trump and Putin

Bitcoin briefly rose more than 3% to a new record of over 123,000 dollars, according to CoinDesk.
It later fell back below 122,000 dollars.
The future for the S&P 500 was unchanged, while that for the Dow Jones Industrial Average edged 0.1% higher.
Later Thursday, a report will show how bad US inflation was at the wholesale level across the US.
Economists expect it to show inflation ticked up to 2.4% in July from 2.3% in June.
In early European trading, Germany's DAX rose 0.5% to 24,296.02.
In Paris, the CAC 40 added 0.4% to 7,832.60.
Europe is bracing for Mr Trump's encounter with Mr Putin, though the US president has said he will prioritise trying to achieve a ceasefire in Ukraine when he meets with Mr Putin on Friday in Anchorage, Alaska.
The Trump-Putin meeting could have major implications for energy markets, potentially leading to an easing of sanctions against Moscow, or an escalation if no progress is made on ending the war in Ukraine.
Early on Thursday, US benchmark crude rose 28 cents to 62.93 dollars per barrel.
Brent crude, the international standard, added 32 cents to 65.95 dollars per barrel.
During Asian trading, Tokyo's Nikkei 225 fell nearly 1.5% to 42,649.26 as investors sold to lock in recent gains that have taken the benchmark to all-time records.
The Japanese yen rose against the dollar after US treasury secretary Scott Bessent said in an interview with Bloomberg that Japan was 'behind the curve' in monetary tightening.
He was referring to the slow pace of increases in Japan's near-zero interest rates.
Low interest rates tend to make the yen weaker against the dollar, giving Japanese exporters a cost advantage in overseas sales.
The dollar fell to 146.50 Japanese yen Thursday, down from 147.39 yen.
The euro slid to 1.1681 dollars from 1.1705 dollars.
In Chinese markets, Hong Kong's Hang Seng index shed 0.4% to 25,519.32, while the Shanghai composite index slid 0.5% to 3,666.44.
South Korea's Kospi rose less than 0.1% to 3,225.66.
In Australia, the S&P ASX 200 index added 0.5% to 8,873.80.
Taiwan's Taiex fell 0.5% and India's Sensex edged 0.2% higher.
On Wednesday, US stocks ticked higher, extending a global rally fuelled by hopes the Federal Reserve will cut US interest rates.
The S&P 500 rose 0.3% and the Dow climbed 1%.
The Nasdaq composite added 0.1%.
Treasury yields eased in the bond market in anticipation that the Fed will cut its main interest rate for the first time this year at its next meeting in September.
Lower rates can boost investment prices and the economy by making it cheaper for US households and businesses to borrow to buy houses, cars or equipment, though they risk worsening inflation.
Mr Trump has angrily been calling for cuts to help the economy, often insulting the Fed chairman Jerome Powell while doing so.
But the Fed has hesitated, worried that Mr Trump's sweeping higher tariffs could make inflation much worse.
Fed officials have said they want to see more fresh data about inflation before moving.
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Putin can't be bribed, Trump, he only wants blood
Putin can't be bribed, Trump, he only wants blood

Telegraph

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Putin can't be bribed, Trump, he only wants blood

What is the price of peace in Ukraine? For Zelensky, the cost is calculated in how much land his country will lose and what political humiliations it is prepared to bear. For ordinary Ukrainians, the price is measured in the blood of their loved ones fighting on the front lines. But for Donald Trump, there is another currency involved: that of minerals, oil and cold cash. As the Telegraph revealed yesterday, Trump is preparing to offer Putin financial incentives to end the war – including access to untapped oil and gas fields off the coast of Alaska and rare earth minerals in Ukraine. Another sweetener Washington intends to put on the table is the lifting of US sanctions on parts and equipment needed to service Western-made planes owned by Russian airlines. But if Trump believes that Putin can be bribed into ending his bloody three-year war on Ukraine he is severely mistaken. In truth Putin does not care about money, nor about the wellbeing of his country's economy, nor about the personal fortunes of Russia's elite. If he did, he would not have started the war in the first place. Over his quarter century in power Putin has gone from pragmatic economic cooperation with the West to a mystical sense of himself as defender of the Motherland and self-anointed re-uniter of the Russian peoples. For his first two decades in office, Putin carefully cultivated friendships with Germany's leaders and built vast gas pipelines that came to provide a third of Europe's energy. At the same time US and European companies poured billions into Russia in the form of car factories, breweries, big-box megastores and shopping malls. But by 2022 Putin's priorities had changed. The cost of his fateful invasion of Ukraine would be the destruction of Gazprom's European business, the collapse of foreign investment, flight of some 1,500 Western companies, and the exclusion of Russian banks from international financial systems. Swathes of wealthy Russians were ruined and many oligarchs found their foreign assets frozen. But Putin didn't care. The mission of preventing Ukraine from becoming a dangerous Western Trojan horse under Russia's southern belly was more important to him than such trivial considerations as whether his people would shop at Ikea, eat at McDonald's or drive Volkswagen cars. When it comes to Putin's self-appointed mission to restore Russia's historical greatness, war is more important than money.

Wall St. Week Ahead Wall Street trains sights on Jackson Hole Fed gathering
Wall St. Week Ahead Wall Street trains sights on Jackson Hole Fed gathering

Reuters

time34 minutes ago

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Wall St. Week Ahead Wall Street trains sights on Jackson Hole Fed gathering

Aug 15 (Reuters) - Investors will next week train their sights on Jackson Hole, Wyoming, where Federal Reserve policymakers gather for their annual policy symposium, in a search for clues on the path of interest rate cuts that could boost stocks to more record highs. This year's gathering follows a week in which consumer and wholesale price data appeared to send mixed signals about how well the economy is weathering U.S. President Donald Trump's sweeping import tariffs. Its climax will be on Friday, when Fed Chair Jerome Powell is scheduled to speak following what will have been a data-light week. After last week's flurry of data demonstrated that consumers are resilient and the jobs market is not dead, some investors still fret Powell may use the gathering to pour cold water on widespread expectations for interest rate cuts in the coming weeks, which have pushed stock indexes to multiple records, citing other figures suggesting that inflation remains a problem. "We may have a lot at stake; this is a potentially significant event this year," said Steven Sosnick, market strategist at IBKR. "What if, once again, people are going into this expecting a dovish Powell and he comes out with all guns blazing?" The futures market still expects the Federal Open Market Committee to cut rates by a quarter of a percentage point at least twice more this year, including an initial cut at its mid-September meeting. Companies likely to benefit most from lower borrowing costs have been among the big winners in recent Wall Street trading, said Andrew Slimmon, head of Applied Equity Advisors at Morgan Stanley Asset Management. "It's all about homebuilders, cyclical stocks, industrials, and materials companies," Slimmon said. Shares of leading homebuilders such as PulteGroup (PHM.N), opens new tab, Lennar (LEN.N), opens new tab, and D.R. Horton (DHI.N), opens new tab are up between 4.2% and 8.8% in the last week, as of midday Friday, thanks largely to the recent drop in mortgage lending rates. Their gains trounced the 1% rally in the Standard & Poor's 500 index (.SPX), opens new tab over the last week. The group has outpaced the broader market more dramatically over the last month, with gains of 15% to 22% compared to 3.3% for the S&P 500. But their future gains hinge on mortgage rates continuing to fall, something that a recent uptick in 10-year Treasury bond yields puts into question. Any hint by Powell that he is paying more heed to bearish signals on inflation than to other, more benign indicators might threaten those gains, Slimmon said. "The more I have seen the homebuilders rally, the more it tells me the market thinks the Fed is going to cut, which means any suggestion at Jackson Hole that this is not going to happen will make markets more vulnerable" to a selloff, he added. To keep markets calm, Powell will have to walk a fine line and underscore the Goldilocks conviction held by many investors that the economy is neither overheating nor at risk of tipping into a recession, said Ashwin Alankar, head of global asset allocation at Janus Henderson. "He can't scare the market by saying the Fed believes the economy really needs a lot of stimulus," Alankar said. Some market-watchers on Thursday said they already detected a shift in sentiment. In a note to clients, Thierry Wizman, global FX and rates strategist at Macquarie Group, said as recently as Wednesday, "the talk on the street was of a 'mega' rate cut" but that a dovish cut in September was "more grounded in reality." Other factors make Powell's comments even more important for stocks this year, investors said. In addition to the market's lofty levels and a recent slide in the Cboe Volatility Index to its lowest level this year, a string of positive second-quarter earnings results is drawing to a close, leaving investors few signals to guide them during the late-summer doldrums. "The calendar is getting pretty quiet," said Jeff Blazek, co-chief investment officer, multi-asset, at Neuberger Berman. The biggest risk of all, however, may be the market's recent euphoria, which has defied a litany of bad news and left April's tariff-driven nosedive in the rear-view mirror. "Going into this event, the more smug we feel ... the greater the risk of a market-moving reaction," said Sosnick.

DOJ sues California to end enforcement of emissions standards for trucks
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Reuters

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DOJ sues California to end enforcement of emissions standards for trucks

Aug 15 (Reuters) - The U.S. Justice Department said on Friday it has sued California in a bid to end the state's enforcement of emissions standards for trucks. The DOJ said it filed two complaints this week in federal courts against the California Air Resources Board on the state's enforcement of preempted emissions standards through its so-called "Clean Truck Partnership" with heavy-duty truck and engine manufacturers. "These actions advance President Donald J. Trump's commitment to end the electric vehicle (EV) mandate, level the regulatory playing field, and promote consumer choice in motor vehicles," it said in a statement.

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