Nissan has predicted a loss between $4.9 billion and $5.3 billion (£3.7bn-£4bn) for the year, primarily due to the impact of Donald Trump’s tariffs.
Nissan has predicted a loss between $4.9 billion and $5.3 billion (£3.7bn-£4bn) for the year, primarily due to the impact of Donald Trump’s tariffs.
This week we await interest rate decisions from Australia, Brazil, the UK and US, the RBNZ delivers a Financial Stability Report and the Bank of England and Bank of Japan
If you are following US data then this week has it all; 4 employment numbers, GDP, inflation metrics, Consumer Confidence, the ISM Manufacturing Index, 5 mega-stock earnings releases; the only
The only “non-surprise” for me last week is the persistence of US inflation! September’s figures for Core and Headline CPI both ticked higher to 3.3% and 2.4% y.o.y respectively.
I’m often surprised as to the credence given to the US Non-Farm Payrolls data release. It was only in August that the annual Payrolls figure was revised downwards by 818,000
October’s Autumnal winds can be scary as any one old enough to remember the violent UK hurricanes in 1987 will attest. This analogy holds true in the financial markets; think
Last week the USDJPY strengthened in a Carry Trade rally despite the Fed cutting US interest rates by 50bp, an uptick in Japanese inflation and the Bank of Japan keeping
The Fed will cut US interest rates this week! The Bank of England may cut interest rates too! And the Bank of Japan will probably stay on hold!
The first week of any month is always one of activity as there are several economic data releases that can move markets. Today is Labor Day in the US- happy
Last week, Euro Area CPI data remained flat at 2.9% y.o.y for July, Canadian inflation fell, US Non- Payrolls posted a staggering fall of -818,000 in its annual revision of
Last week, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand shocked markets by cutting interest rates by a quarter of one percent, despite a most recent Q2 assessment of annual inflation of
Last Monday Japanese authorities were swift to attempt to re-establish some order in the markets by taking a less hawkish stance on raising interest rates in the short term. It’s