After tumbling last month to its lowest in two years (blamed on weather), ADP's employment report was expected to show a rebound in Feb, adding 200k jobs. The actual print was even higher at +242k (with January's revised up to +119k).
Prabhudas Lilladher Group Chairperson and MD Amisha Vora believes the best way to navigate the markets is with asset allocation across debt, gold and equities. She speaks with Haslinda Amin and Rishaad Salamat on "Bloomberg Markets: Asia".
Total to exceed $835 billion, up from the current $816 billion Officials call it one of the largest peacetime defense budgets
Just a few weeks ago, China and the U.S. were tiptoeing toward a rapprochement. Now, any fence-mending has been postponed.
France's nationwide strike against a planned pension reform, which disrupted train services, shut schools and halted fuel deliveries, will spill into Wednesday as unions seek to force a government retreat on the deeply unpopular policy.
Japan logged its largest current account deficit ever in January as a combination of global slowdown and China's Lunar New Year holidays undermined the country's ability to earn from trade. The trade balance, a part of the current account, also hit a record deficit. The current account deficit, at 1.98 trillion yen ($14.43 billion), was more than double a median market...
Recession — and layoff — fears loom large over many households. Nearly half of U.S. adults feel the country is already in a recession, a Morning Consult report found. Economists say the chance of a recession in the next 12 months is somewhere around 61%, according to a recent Wall Street Journal survey; while economists in a separate Bloomberg poll said it was more like a 70%.
Their demographic alone amassed nearly $4 trillion in debt in the fourth quarter of 2022, according to the Wall Street Journal's analysis of Federal Reserve Bank of New York data. This marks a 27% rise from late 2019 — the biggest jump of any age group — and it’s the fastest they’ve ever accumulated debt since the 2008 financial crisis.
The specter of peak oil that haunted global energy markets during the first decade of the 21st century is once again rearing its head.
Asian assets face selling pressure after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell jolted investors with unexpectedly aggressive comments on the outlook for higher interest rates.
All of a sudden, the prospect of US rates hitting 6% is becoming real enough for investors to rethink their strategies.
For the first time since the global financial crisis, investors are betting long-term inflation in the euro area will match that of the US, underscoring the dramatic shift in the outlook for Europe recently.
Bond traders boosted bets that the Federal Reserve may re-accelerate the pace of rate increases at the policy meeting later this month, after central bank head Jerome Powell said he’s ready for faster monetary tightening if economic data justifies it.
Fannie Mae’s gauge of housing sentiment dropped 3.8 points in February to 58.0, falling close to its record low set last year.
Higher taxes may not be enough to save Medicare, with program cutbacks needed to bring down rising costs, Doug Holtz-Eakin, President of the American Action Forum, tells Yahoo! Finance Live. The growing cost of Medicare and other social services is rising at a pace that's outstripping even ambitious tax programs, with rates of up to 7 percent per year, says Holtz-Eakin.
The bond market is doubling down on the prospect of a US recession after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell warned of a return to bigger interest-rate hikes to cool inflation and the economy.
Stocks fell, the dollar hit multi-month highs and U.S. and German short-term bond yields were parked at their highest levels since at least 2008 as Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell put big rate hikes back on the table to tame inflation.
During testimony on Capitol Hill, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said the central bank may have to raise interest rates higher than previously expected to bring down price inflation.Despite the speed of Fed hiking and the enormous amount of debt in the US economy, most people in the mainstream seem convinced the central bank can keep hiking rates without breaking the economy.Economist Thorsten Polleit disagrees.
Every government policy has consequences - some intended and some unintended.There is at least one serious unintended consequence of the economic sanctions levied against Russia after its invasion of Ukraine - an erosion of the US dollar dominance.
In January, retail sales came in much hotter than expected. Now we know how consumers paid for the spending spree. They put it on credit cards.After slowing modestly in December, growth in revolving debt spiked again in January. But a slowdown in non-revolving credit moderated the overall increase in consumer debt.Overall, this signals a pretty bleak trajectory for the economy.