
Tariff Anxiety Clouds IMF Meetings
"Bloomberg Markets" follows the market moves across every global asset class and discusses the biggest issues for Wall Street. Today's guests; Former Fed Governor Betsy Duke, Bloomberg's Alix Steel, Michael McKee, Keith Naughton, and Devon Pendleton. (Source: Bloomberg)

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CNBC
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Dow futures drop 200 points as Trump weighs attack on Iran: Live updates
Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on April 2, 2025. NYSE Stock futures were lower ahead of Friday's session, with investors monitoring conflict in the Middle East between Iran and Israel, and potential direct U.S. involvement. Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 221 points, or 0.5%. Nasdaq 100 futures ticked down 0.6%%, while S&P 500 futures fell 0.4%. Regular trading was closed in the U.S. on Thursday for the Juneteenth holiday. Investors remain jittery as the conflict between Israel and Iran has yet to cool. President Donald Trump is weighing direct U.S. involvement with a strike on Tehran, with the White House on Thursday saying that he will make a final decision within the next two weeks. Trump previously called for Tehran's complete surrender, to which Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, labeled the notion "threatening and ridiculous." International benchmark Brent as well U.S. crude oil , which initially spiked following the onset of Israel's missile strike on Iran, climbed roughly 3% on Thursday, on the possibility of U.S. jumping into the conflict. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is reportedly ordering Jerusalem's military to strike "strategic targets" in Iran, as well as "government targets." "There are several key questions to answer before we know how stocks will handle this geopolitical shock, including how much of Iran's energy infrastructure will be impaired and for how long, whether Iran's nuclear capabilities will be completely wiped out, and whether the current regime will remain in power," said Jeff Buchbinder, chief equity strategist for LPL Financial. The still-simmering tension in the Middle East comes as investors also weighed comments from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Wednesday, following the central banks decision to hold interest rates steady. Stocks closed lower following Powell's comments, which essentially said that the Fed is in no hurry to cut benchmark rates and will remain data dependent, especially as it remains unclear how Trump's tariffs will impact the economy. Trump ripped into Powell again Thursday, saying the Fed Chair is costing the U.S. "hundreds of billions of dollars" by delaying rate cuts. For the week, the S&P 500 is up marginally with a gain of 0.07%. The 30-stock Dow has lost 0.06%, while the Nasdaq has advanced about 1%. On the economic front, investors will monitor the Philadelphia Fed's manufacturing survey on Friday morning, followed by the Conference Board's leading economic indicators reading for May.
Yahoo
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US Plans to Ease Bank Capital Rules on Treasury Trades
The top US bank regulators plan to reduce a key capital buffer for the biggest lenders by up to 1.5 percentage points following concerns that it constrained their trading in the $29 trillion Treasuries market. The Fed said on Tuesday that it plans to meet on June 25 to discuss the plan. Katanga Johnson reports on Bloomberg Television.


Bloomberg
2 hours ago
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Japan to Sound Out Market Players on Tweaks to Bond Issuance
Japan's Finance Ministry will seek feedback from market players later Friday over its planned reductions to super-long bond issuance as it takes steps to quell market turbulence. The ministry will hold a meeting with primary dealers at 4 p.m. in Tokyo to discuss recent market developments and its issuance plans. A draft of its revised bond plan seen by Bloomberg showed that authorities will propose cutting issuance of 20-, 30- and 40-year bonds by ¥100 billion ($690 million) each per auction through March 2026. To offset the reduction in sales of longer maturities, the ministry is looking to increase issuance of 2-year and shorter-dated debt, the plan showed.