Latest news with #MLIV


Los Angeles Times
2 days ago
- Business
- Los Angeles Times
Stocks will rally despite extended dollar declines, markets survey finds
US equities will put the worst of this year's trade-war turmoil behind them and rally to fresh highs in 2025, according to a survey of Bloomberg subscribers who attended a panel discussion on macro trends. The S&P 500 will climb to 6,500 — a better than 9% increase from Thursday's close — by year-end, according to 44% of the 27 responses in a Markets Live Pulse survey. The index was seen reaching that level by the first half of next year by 26% of participants, with 11% saying it would happen in the second half and the remainder estimating 2027 or later. A rally to 6,500 would likely mean the market fully moves on from concerns that President Donald Trump's tariffs may severely damage the economy. It would represent a substantial recovery from the impact of the trade war, which currently has the US benchmark hovering just above its starting level for 2025. Expectations for the dollar are gloomier, with 68% of the 25 respondents to that question forecasting the US currency will keep falling at least until the first half of next year. That includes the 40% of participants who expect the depreciation trend to extend into 2027. The MLIV panel discussed both whether US exceptionalism in equities was past its use-by date, and the potential that concerns about how sustainable the dollar's haven role has become. The survey responses may be taken to signal doubts that US equities will be knocked from their perch anytime soon, especially given the still-positive impacts from the AI boom expected to feed through into corporate earnings. The dollar's downtrend is seen as far more sustainable. That signals respondents may be leaning into the idea that the currency channel will go on being the clearest expression of concerns regarding US assets in general. If investors are going to be demanding a greater premium to put their money into the US that will come via a lower US dollar level, rather than via sustained, serious declines in nominal asset prices. As for Treasuries, responses were more evenly split. A modest majority, 56% of the 25 who answered that question, expected the 10-year yield to end 2025 at 4.6% or above. That included the 24% of the total who forecast it would be above 5%. The yield was at 4.39% on Thursday. Some 20% saw it dropping below 4%. The MLIV Pulse survey was conducted among Bloomberg clients immediately after MLIV's Money & Macro panel held Thursday on How to Trade the New Markets Regime. Sign up for future surveys here. Reynolds writes for Bloomberg
Yahoo
26-04-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Rally to Run Until US Economy Hits a Wall: 3-Minute MLIV
Guy Johnson, Lizzy Burden and Paul Dobson break down today's key themes for analysts and investors on "Bloomberg: The Opening Trade." For up to the minute market intelligence and insight, click MLIV .


Bloomberg
06-03-2025
- Business
- Bloomberg
Euro Rising to $1.30 Is Reasonable Target: 3-Minute MLIV
Anna Edwards, Tom Mackenzie, Guy Johnson, and Mark Cudmore break down today's key themes for analysts and investors on "Bloomberg: The Opening Trade." For up to the minute market intelligence and insight, click MLIV . (Source: Bloomberg)


Bloomberg
31-01-2025
- Business
- Bloomberg
DeepSeek Probed by US Over Possible Nvidia Chip Purchases
Good morning. DeepSeek gets probed by the FBI and White House. UK official statistics are being investigated for quality issues. And the days might be numbered for London's oldest working lift. Listen to the day's top stories. US officials are investigating if DeepSeek bought advanced Nvidia chips through third parties in Singapore, avoiding export restrictions, people familiar said. Separately, Samsung is said to be supplying a less-advanced AI chip to Nvidia for the Chinese market. And Bloomberg's MLIV survey says DeepSeek's emergence will have little to no impact on US tech giants' shares.