
Shares in Asia rise on Fed rate cut bets; dollar steadies
U.S. shares rallied on Monday on generally positive earnings reports and increasing bets for a September rate cut from the Fed after disappointing jobs data on Friday.
Oil prices edged lower after output increases by OPEC+, while gold hovered near a one-week high and Vietnamese shares climbed to a new record high.
"There are signs of weakness in parts of the U.S. economy, that plays to the view that maybe not in September, but certainly this year that the Fed's still on course to ease potentially twice," said Rodrigo Catril, senior currency strategist at National Australia Bank.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan (.MIAPJ0000PUS), opens new tab rose 0.6%, while Japan's Nikkei gauge climbed 0.7% after falling by the most in two months on Monday.
Pan-region Euro Stoxx 50 futures were up 0.2%, while German DAX futures were up 0.3% and FTSE futures rose 0.3%. U.S. S&P 500 e-mini stock futures rose 0.2%.
The dollar was flat at 147.09 yen, and the euro was down 0.1% on the day at $1.1557. The dollar index , which tracks the greenback against a basket of major peers, rallied 0.2% after a two-day decline.
Friday's soft U.S. nonfarm payrolls data added to the case for a cut by the Fed, and took on another layer of drama with Trump's decision to fire the head of labor statistics responsible for the figures.
Odds for a September rate cut now stand at about 94%, according to CME Fedwatch, from a 63% chance seen on July 28. Market participants see at least two quarter-point cuts by the end of this year.
News that Trump would get to fill a governorship position at the Fed early also added to worries about politicisation of interest rate policy.
Trump again threatened to raise tariffs on goods from India from the 25% level announced last month, over its Russian oil purchases, while New Delhi called his attack "unjustified" and vowed to protect its economic interests.
Oil prices fell on mounting oversupply concerns, with the potential for more Russian supply disruptions providing support after Trump said he could impose 100% secondary tariffs on Russian crude buyers such as India.
Brent crude futures fell 0.1%, to $66.21 a barrel.
Second-quarter U.S. earnings season is winding down, but investors are still looking forward to reports this week from companies including Walt Disney (DIS.N), opens new tab and Caterpillar (CAT.N), opens new tab.
Tech heavyweights Nvidia (NVDA.O), opens new tab, Alphabet (GOOGL.O), opens new tab and Meta (META.O), opens new tab surged overnight, and Palantir Technologies (PLTR.O), opens new tab raised its revenue forecast for the second time this year on expectations of sustained demand for its artificial intelligence services.
"Company earnings announcements continue to spur market moves," Moomoo Australia market strategist Michael McCarthy said in a note.
Data today from Asia's two biggest economies showed resilience in their service sectors. In Japan, the S&P Global final services purchasing managers' index (PMI) to 53.6 in July from 51.7 in June for the strongest expansion since February. China's services activity last month at its fastest pace in more than a year.
China's blue-chip CSI300 Index (.CSI300), opens new tab climbed 0.4%, while the Shanghai Composite Index (.SSEC), opens new tab gained 0.6%. Vietnam's (.VNI), opens new tab gauge of shares surged 2.4% and touched a fresh record high.
Bitcoin fell 0.4% to 114,448.59 while spot gold was slightly lower at $3,368.44 per ounce.
Hashtags

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


Daily Mail
31 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Latest sign Las Vegas is dying
Las Vegas has shown yet another worrying sign that it's on the decline as soaring prices and tourist boycotts have driven visitors away. Tipping in Las Vegas has plunged by as much as 50 percent, according to Fox News. Workers are blaming a sharp drop in visitors, which they say has left them with fewer customers and lower pay. 'No tax on tips, that's a rad thing,' Charlie Mungo, 36, a tattoo artist in downtown Las Vegas, told the Wall Street Journal of President Trump's new policy. 'But it doesn't really do us much good if there isn't any people to get tips from.' Mungo said he now makes about $1,500 a month and has lost nearly a third of his clients after Canadian tourists, who used to represent 30 percent of his business, stopped coming. Many blame the economy, rising costs, and even political boycotts of the city. Some service workers are pointing fingers at Donald Trump, saying his presidency has led to a drop in international visitors, while others say the real problem is Vegas itself. 'We're all starting to freak out,' Mungo said. Jacob Soto, 22, a supervisor at Pinkbox Doughnuts in downtown Vegas, told the Wall Street Journal that his credit card tips have shrunk from $200 a week to $100–$150. 'I kinda rely on tips at the end of the day,' he said. On Reddit's r/VegasLocals forum, one cocktail waitress said she used to average about '80 cents a drink.' 'Now I'm averaging about 10 cents,' the waitress wrote. Another server added: 'We are working triple what we used to and making a quarter of what we did.' According to the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, overall visits to Sin City are down more than 6 percent this year. Las Vegas welcomed 3.39 million visitors in March, down almost eight percent from 3.68 million in February. April saw just over 3.3 million visitors, a drop of 5.1 percent from last year.


The Sun
2 hours ago
- The Sun
Kemi Badenoch throws down gauntlet to Keir Starmer and demands no stealth taxes on Brits
KEMI Badenoch has thrown down the gauntlet to Keir Starmer on the economy demanding no stealth taxes on Brits. The Tory leader has written to the Prime Minister saying 'tax rises are a choice'. She has challenged him to repeat Chancellor Rachel Reeves' promise at the Budget last year not to extend the freeze on income tax and National Insurance thresholds. Failing to end the freeze as planned in 2028 would mean millions more Brits are forced into paying a higher rate of tax under fiscal drag. This is when people are pulled into higher income tax brackets as inflation pushes their wages up. It comes after a bombshell report said the Chancellor must find £50billion in her autumn Budget to keep the country's finances in check. She will have to raise taxes or cut spending to maintain her stated financial cushion of £9.9billion by the end of the decade, according to the National Institute of Economic and Social Research. At the Budget, Ms Reeves said: 'Extending the threshold freeze would hurt working people. "It would take more money out of their payslips. 'I am keeping every single promise on tax that I made in our manifesto, so there will be no extension of the freeze in income tax and national insurance thresholds.' Ms Badenoch asked the PM: 'I am writing to you to ask: does this remain government policy?' Kemi Badenoch pleads for Tories to give her more time just like Margaret Thatcher was given A Labour spokesperson said: 'We'll take no lectures from this failed Tory Party. "They crashed the economy which sent bills and mortgages rocketing, and left a £22 billion blackhole. 'Kemi Badenoch's next letter should be an apology to hard-pressed households for the Conservatives' role in hammering their family finances. 'Labour is the only party focused on creating a fairer Britain.' 1


Daily Mail
4 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Tories demand action as business leaders say lack of skilled workers is crippling economy
Tens of thousands of firms across Scotland are being forced to reduce their opening hours or slash services thanks to dire staff shortages which are crippling the economy. According to shocking new research, one in three small businesses is now closing early, shutting completely on certain days or scaling back their operations because they simply cannot recruit enough workers to operate fully. Business owners are frustrated they are losing trade worth millions of pounds, not through lack of demand, but through a lack of employees. The problem is particularly severe in rural areas, especially the Highlands and Islands, where a shrinking population means firms struggle to find enough working-age staff to fill vacancies. But across the country business owners are also complaining that, even where staff are available, many lack the basic skills and commitment to do the required jobs. The shortages are all the more concerning given that the unemployment rate in Scotland currently stands at 3.7 per cent - with more than 90,000 Scots out of work. Last night business leaders called for urgent action to support a key sector of the economy, while the revelations also sparked a fierce political row. Guy Hinks, chair of the Federation of Small Businesses Scotland (FSB) - which carried out the research - warned that economic growth was being stifled. He said: 'When you are running a small business, you want to be doing just that, running the business - not tearing your hair out trying to find staff. It's hugely frustrating, but it's a situation which tens of thousands of small Scottish firms find themselves in. 'The scale of the issue means it is not just a problem for the individual businesses themselves, it is a drag on the national economy. 'Many of these will be successful firms with ambitions to grow, perhaps to take on extra staff, but instead are being forced to curtail their operations due to circumstances beyond their control.' Small businesses are the backbone of the Scottish economy, with around 350,000 separate firms employing over 900,000 people and turning over £93bn annually. To understand the pressures firms are facing, the FSB has just completed a comprehensive 'state of the nation' survey of its members. With full results due to be published later this month, the FSB has shared with the Scottish Mail on Sunday its alarming findings on staff shortages - and the devastating impact on companies up and down the country. The survey reveals shortages have forced one in three (32.4 per cent) small businesses to make changes to their daily operations over the last year. Overall, almost one in five (18 per cent) cut services, while one in 14 (7.2 per cent) cut their opening hours. A similar number introduced unwanted changes to cover shortages - such as owners or senior managers being diverted from their normal role running the business to helping carry out day-to-day tasks. In rural and remote areas, particularly the Highlands and Islands, shortages are largely driven by demographic factors, as the overall population is falling while an ever greater proportion of people are retired. More than two fifths of small businesses in the Highlands (43.5 per cent) reported a lack of available local workers being an issue. According to the FSB, firms in every area of the country reported shortages of workers with technical and job-specific skills. Worryingly, they also said many businesses were concerned that staff lacked basic skills, such as communication, problem-solving and teamwork. Construction and hospitality were the sectors most badly affected. The Tories said businesses were being let down by the governments at both Westminster and Holyrood. The party's business, economy, tourism and culture spokesman Murdo Fraser said: 'This is clear evidence of the damage being done by the anti-business policies of both Labour and the SNP, and by the failure to invest in training and our homegrown workforce. 'The lack of suitably skilled workers, when record numbers of Scots are economically inactive, is a particularly damning indictment of the nationalists' failings in education. 'Their broken promises on rural infrastructure, transport and housing have only made matters worse.' Figures released earlier this year show the overall unemployment rate for people aged 16 years and over in Scotland was 3.7 per cent - rising to 11.5 per cent among people aged 16-24. In total, around 91,500 adults over 16 and over are unemployed, with just over a quarter being unemployed for 12 months or more. Last night the Scottish Government blamed Westminster for blocking its calls for re-gional visas, as well as for introducing visa restrictions on overseas workers and in-creasing employers' National Insurance contributions. Deputy First Minister Kate Forbes said: 'We have repeatedly called on the UK Govern-ment to work with us to develop tailored migration routes, including a Rural Visa Pilot, to grow Scotland's economy and strengthen our public services. 'Recent changes to the immigration system, including an increase to the skills and sal-ary threshold for the Skilled Worker Visa, have created additional barriers for business-es which rely on international talent to fill vital job roles. 'We continue to work with businesses to drive growth across the economy and call on the UK Government to reverse its damaging decision to raise employers' National In-surance contributions.' We can't get people we need, says hotel boss As director of a Highland hospitality firm, there is nothing more frustrating for Richard Drummond than having to close early. Yet even in the peak visitor season, when tourist numbers are at their highest, staff shortages mean he has no other option. 'We want to trade late into the evening,' he said. 'But now, even at the weekends and during the summer, we have no choice operationally but to shut earlier. We simply haven't got enough staff.' Mr Drummond helps run Turas Hotels which operates venues - including hotels, restaurants and bars, plus a distillery and brewery - in Pitlochry, Aviemore, Boat of Garten, Inverness and Ullapool. Speaking to the Scottish Mail on Sunday from the McKays Hotel in Pitlochry - where a lack of restaurant staff meant he was helping serve lunch to customers - he explained the pressures he faces. He said: 'I'm so proud of the businesses we've created: they're great holiday destinations that ooze Scottishness. 'And the Highlands are a world class destination that attract people from every corner of the globe. 'At peak times, the demand from visitors is huge. But trying to service that demand has become a real struggle. 'Trying to get staff and entice people into our industry has become more and more demanding.' Mr Drummond said Brexit and changes to visa regulations had made it far harder to attract workers from overseas - while the demographics of the Highlands mean he struggles to find staff locally. The short-term and seasonal nature of many hospitality jobs, he said, also made attracting workers difficult - as did the lack of affordable accommodation in many parts of the Highlands. He said: 'Tourism is one of the most important parts of the Scottish economy, but because it's fragmented around the country and often involves individuals or small-scale operators, it's simply not taken seriously enough by government. As a result, not enough is being done to support the hospitality industry, especially in rural areas.'