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SYMBOL
LAST
BID
ASK
HIGH
LOW
NET CHG.
%CHG.
SPREAD
SPX
S&P 500 Index
6846.50
6846.50
6846.50
6878.28
6827.18
-23.90
-0.35%
--
DJI
Dow Jones Industrial Average
47739.31
47739.31
47739.31
47971.51
47611.93
-215.67
-0.45%
--
IXIC
NASDAQ Composite Index
23545.89
23545.89
23545.89
23698.93
23455.05
-32.22
-0.14%
--
USDX
US Dollar Index
99.000
99.080
99.000
99.000
99.000
+0.050
+ 0.05%
--
EURUSD
Euro / US Dollar
1.16373
1.16383
1.16373
1.16388
1.16322
+0.00009
+ 0.01%
--
GBPUSD
Pound Sterling / US Dollar
1.33225
1.33237
1.33225
1.33234
1.33140
+0.00020
+ 0.02%
--
XAUUSD
Gold / US Dollar
4191.07
4191.51
4191.07
4193.27
4189.64
+1.37
+ 0.03%
--
WTI
Light Sweet Crude Oil
58.660
58.702
58.660
58.676
58.543
+0.105
+ 0.18%
--

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KCNA: North Korea's Supreme Leader Kim Jong UN Sends Condolences To Russian Embassy For Ambassador's Death

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Japan Prime Minister Takaichi: 30 Injuries Reported So Far From Monday Earthquake

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USA Senate Committee Votes To Advance Nomination Of Jared Isaacman To Head Nasa

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Singapore Post - New Rate For Standard Regular Mail & Standard Large Mail Will Be S$0.62 And S$0.90 Respectively

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Australia's S&P/ASX 200 Index Down 0.27% At 8601.10 Points In Early Trade

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Trump: The USA Needs Mexico To Release 200000 Acre-Feet Of Water Before December 31St, And The Rest Must Come Soon After

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Trump: I Have Authorized Documentation To Impose A 5% Tariff On Mexico If This Water Isn't Released

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Brazil's Sao Paulo State Governor Tarcisio De Freitas Says Flavio Bolsonaro Will Have His Support - Cnn Brasil

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Ukraine's Security Must Be Guaranteed, In The Long Term, As A First Line Of Defence For Our Union, Says European Commission President

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Ukraine's Sovereignty Must Be Respected, Says European Commission President

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The Goal Is A Strong Ukraine, On The Battlefield And At The Negotiating Table, Says European Commission President

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As Peace Talks Are Ongoing, The EU Remains Ironclad In Its Support For Ukraine, Says European Commission President

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Pepsico: Asking USA-Based Pepna Employees As Well As Pbus Division Offices And Pfus Region Offices To Work Remotely This Week

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A U.S. Judge Ruled That President Trump’s Ban On Several Wind Power Projects Was Illegal

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Senior USA Administration Official: We Continue To Monitor Drc-Rwanda Situation Closely, Continue To Work With All Sides To Ensure Commitments Are Honored

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Israeli Military Says It Has Struck Infrastructure Belonging To Hezbollah In Several Areas In Southern Lebanon

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SPDR Gold Holdings Down 0.11%, Or 1.14 Tonnes

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On Monday (December 8), In Late New York Trading, S&P 500 Futures Fell 0.21%, Dow Jones Futures Fell 0.43%, NASDAQ 100 Futures Fell 0.08%, And Russell 2000 Futures Fell 0.04%

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Morgan Stanley: Data Center ABS Spreads Are Expected To Widen In 2026

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(US Stocks) The Philadelphia Gold And Silver Index Closed Down 2.34% At 311.01 Points. (Global Session) The NYSE Arca Gold Miners Index Closed Down 2.17%, Hitting A Daily Low Of 2235.45 Points; US Stocks Remained Slightly Down Before The Opening Bell—holding Steady Around 2280 Points—before Briefly Rising Slightly

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          S&P 500: Bears Emerge as Funding Stress and Credit Risks Deepen

          Adam

          Economic

          Summary:

          The S&P 500 fell as rising repo rates (above 4%) and widening credit spreads signaled deepening funding stress and credit risks. The index faces further pressure, potentially breaking below 6,750.

          The S&P 500 fell by about 1% on the day, reversing the recent string of Monday rallies. Not surprisingly, the index attempted to rally in the mid-morning as volatility declined. However, the market had already opened lower, and while we saw a brief rebound around 10 a.m., those gains faded quickly, as Monday was a Treasury settlement date.
          Today is also a Treasury settlement date, and we’re already seeing repo rates move back above 4% for Monday. For now, the S&P 500 continues to hold around 6,750, which remains the key sticking point. Every time the index gets there, it bounces off that level or near it, but at some point, that region is likely to break.
          Given the small end-of-day surge, it wouldn’t be surprising if we gap lower today, undercut the 6,640 low, and continue to see pressure throughout the day—potentially even testing 6,600 or moving below it.
          S&P 500: Bears Emerge as Funding Stress and Credit Risks Deepen_1
          Also, we’ve seen the dispersion trade continue to unwind, with three-month implied correlations rising faster than the dispersion index on Monday, further narrowing that spread. This unwind should only grow strong after Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) reports.
          S&P 500: Bears Emerge as Funding Stress and Credit Risks Deepen_2
          The average repo rate at DTC on Monday was around 4.04%, suggesting we’ll see SOFR push above 4% today as well. With another settlement date today, there’s a chance funding conditions will tighten further and those rates move even higher.
          Wednesday should bring some relief since there are no settlements, and midweek typically sees a bit of easing. But by Thursday, I would expect rates to tighten again, with repo potentially pushing back toward that 4% corridor. That would also put upward pressure on usage of the Standing Repo Facility.
          S&P 500: Bears Emerge as Funding Stress and Credit Risks Deepen_3
          The CDX High Yield credit spread index also moved higher on Monday and appears to have broken a downtrend. It’s now approaching a resistance level around 342, which was last seen in mid-October.
          A breakout above 342 would likely signal even wider spreads ahead, and that wouldn’t be surprising given the rise we’re already seeing in CDS spreads for companies like Oracle (NYSE:ORCL), Meta (NASDAQ:META), and CrowdStrike (NASDAQ:CRWD). We’re even seeing similar moves in names like SoftBank in Japan.
          So it wouldn’t be surprising at all to see credit spreads widen more broadly across the market—and that would clearly be negative for equities overall.
          S&P 500: Bears Emerge as Funding Stress and Credit Risks Deepen_4
          The final piece of the puzzle may actually be coming from Japan, where rates are rising rapidly amid concerns over new stimulus proposals, making markets increasingly nervous. This has pushed yields sharply higher across the curve, with the 10-year rising to 1.73%—the highest level since 2008. More importantly, there appears to be room for yields to move even higher in the near term, with the next potential resistance level likely somewhere around 1.90%.
          S&P 500: Bears Emerge as Funding Stress and Credit Risks Deepen_5
          If concerns over the government’s spending plan persist and Japanese rates continue to rise while the yen weakens, it could trigger a flight to safety into the dollar. That would likely lead to a materially stronger dollar against the yen and to higher dollar funding costs. In that scenario, the Japanese yen five-year cross-currency basis swap would move lower—becoming more negative—widening the spread and making it more costly for Japanese investors to fund U.S. dollar trades.
          This would obviously suck even more liquidity out of the market.
          S&P 500: Bears Emerge as Funding Stress and Credit Risks Deepen_6
          Finally, the 1966 analogue continues to track the S&P 500’s present moves. For whatever it is worth.
          S&P 500: Bears Emerge as Funding Stress and Credit Risks Deepen_7

          Source: investing

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          US Companies Shed 2,500 Jobs As October Drew To A Close

          James Whitman

          Economic

          US companies shed 2,500 jobs per week on average in the four weeks ended Nov. 1, according to data released Tuesday by ADP Research.

          The decline suggests the labor market lost momentum in late October. ADP's monthly jobs report, which was released Nov. 5, showed private employment increased 42,000 after declining in the prior two months.

          The ADP snapshot of the labor market has helped bridge the gap with official employment data delayed by the longest government shutdown in history. While funding to official statistics agencies has been restored, it's still unclear when October economic data will be issued.

          On Thursday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics will issue its September jobs report, which is expected to show total US payrolls rose 55,000 from the prior month.

          The weekly ADP figures follow a number of large companies announcing job cuts during the month, including Amazon.com Inc. and Target Corp. Planned layoffs were the highest for any October in more than two decades, according a report from outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas Inc.

          Meanwhile, Americans have grown increasingly concerned about job security. A Harris Poll for Bloomberg News conducted on Oct. 23-25 showed 55% of employed Americans are worried about losing their job.

          Source: Bloomberg

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          House Poised To Vote To Release Epstein Files After Trump Drops Opposition

          Justin

          Political

          The House on Tuesday is expected to vote to order the Department of Justice to release all of its files on notorious sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, two days after President Donald Trump abruptly dropped his opposition to the bipartisan bill.

          The measure is set to come up during the chamber's first vote series of the day around 2 p.m. ET, NBC News reported.

          "Almost everybody" will vote to pass it, House Majority Whip Tom Emmer, R-Minn., told NBC on Monday night.

          That wasn't always the case. The push to release the Epstein files had faced opposition from GOP lawmakers, following the lead of Trump, whose White House had warned that backing the effort would be considered a "hostile act."

          A discharge petition that would have forced a vote on the bill was jammed up during the government shutdown, as House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., kept representatives out of session for nearly eight weeks. The prolonged absence delayed the swearing-in of Democratic Rep. Adelita Grijalva of Arizona, the final signature needed to move the petition forward.

          The shutdown ended last Wednesday and Grijalva, after being sworn in, signed the discharge petition. But, with pressure mounting, Johnson said he would bring the Epstein bill to a vote earlier than expected.

          The bill from Republican Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky and Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna of California is being brought to the floor under a procedure that will require a two-thirds majority to pass. If it succeeds, it will head to the Senate.

          Trump, a former friend of Epstein's who had a falling out with him years earlier, said on the campaign trail that he would support releasing the government's files from its investigations into the wealthy and well-connected financier. Epstein died in jail in 2019 while facing federal sex trafficking charges.

          But Trump's DOJ said in a July 6 memo that it had conducted an "exhaustive review" of Epstein-related matters and determined "that no further disclosure would be appropriate or warranted."

          That determination, and Trump's repeated insistence that the focus on Epstein was a Democratic "hoax," has spurred outrage across the political spectrum, including from some of Trump's own supporters.

          The House Oversight Committee last week released thousands of documents from Epstein's estate, including emails appearing to show Epstein discussing Trump.

          Trump on Sunday night abruptly reversed course, urging House Republicans to vote in favor of the Epstein files bill.

          Source: CNBC

          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
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          Econtemplation: Go Easy On Government Borrowing

          Samantha Luan

          Forex

          Economic

          Political

          Imagine running a household where your debt grows faster than your income year after year. Eventually, something has to give. Now, scale that up to the global economy and you will see why rising public debt is something that should not be overlooked.

          According to the International Monetary Fund's Global Debt Database, global public debt rose for the second consecutive year to 92.8% of GDP in 2024, up from 91.8% in 2023. Sustained borrowing has kept debt burdens elevated, and if current trends persist, global public debt could breach 100% of GDP by 2029, based on the IMF's estimate in its October 2025 Fiscal Monitor publication.

          To understand how we got here, we must rewind five years. The Covid-19 pandemic triggered an extraordinary surge in government borrowing to fund rescue packages and stimulus programmes. This saw the global public debt-to-GDP ratio jump from 84.3% in 2019 to 99.6% in 2020. While stimulus measures have unwound and fiscal deficits have since narrowed, the debt itself has not gone away. There was a transitory fall in public debt to 90.5% of GDP in 2022 as stimulus unwound and GDP rebounded, but the decline stalled. Today, debt levels remain well above the 2010s average of around 80%.

          Why does this matter?

          First, rising interest rates are making debt more expensive. Governments that borrowed at low or near-zero rates during the pandemic are now refinancing at much higher rates, straining budgets. A good example is at home in Malaysia, where debt service charges have been rising amid a larger overall debt burden and higher interest rates. Debt servicing is projected to consume nearly 17% of government revenue in 2026, up from around 10% in the early 2010s and above the Ministry of Finance's self-imposed 15% limit.

          Second, high debt reduces fiscal flexibility. Should another crisis emerge, many governments may find themselves constrained and unable to deploy large-scale stimulus measures without risking investor confidence.

          Third, credit rating agencies are watching. Fitch downgraded the US' credit rating in 2023, followed by Moody's in May 2025, stripping the US of its AAA status across all major rating agencies. While markets shrugged off the downgrade, it underscores that even top-rated sovereigns are not immune.

          However, debt accumulation is far from uniform and should not be overly simplified, as each country carries its own risks and challenges.

          Advanced economies continue to carry outsized debt burdens, led by the US and Japan. Public debt in advanced economies averaged around 109.7% of GDP in 2024, up from 104.9% in 2019. Emerging markets, though lower, have seen much more rapid debt growth, rising from 54.2% in 2019 to 69% in 2024.

          This divergence means the global average masks significant variation in fiscal risk. Advanced economies carry high debt levels but benefit from deep domestic capital markets and reserve currency status, which allow them to maintain high levels of debt. However, downside risks remain. A sudden shift in investor sentiment, political gridlock or an inflation resurgence could sharply raise borrowing costs. With such large debt stocks, even modest rate hikes can balloon interest payments. Countries with weaker fiscal anchors or slower growth may face sharper sustainability pressures, especially if slower global growth, triggered in part by US tariff hikes, forces governments to re-engage in debt-fuelled stimulus.

          Emerging markets face a different set of risks. Rapid debt accumulation can erode investor confidence and raise doubts about fiscal sustainability and future economic development. While debt can fund productive investments that "pay for themselves" through higher national income, there is no guarantee that growth will outpace borrowing costs. If income growth falls short, governments may need to introduce new taxes or cut spending to service debt, which dampens long-term economic growth. These risks are amplified when debt rises at an unusually steep pace, as what is observed currently, which would then require substantial growth that may be difficult to achieve. Given the generally weaker fiscal institutions and narrower tax bases among emerging markets, even moderate debt levels can become unsustainable if growth falters or global conditions tighten.

          As economists, we must ask: Are we too complacent?

          Debt provides useful leverage, but leverage comes with risk. Think of it like a financial pressure cooker: heat builds quietly inside, even if everything looks calm on the outside. As long as the lid holds, it seems safe and will continue to produce the end product you desire. But if pressure keeps rising and no one releases the steam, the risk of a sudden blowout becomes very real. History reminds us that debt crises often erupt when least expected. Governments must continue consolidating, investors must remain vigilant, and policymakers must prepare for scenarios where debt becomes a constraint, not just a statistic.

          Source: Theedgemarkets

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          Tech Slide Continues, Yen Still Lacks BoJ Signal

          Michelle

          Forex

          Stocks

          Economic

          Global markets remain under pressure today as risk sentiment deteriorates further across regions. Europe opened firmly lower, tracking the broad declines seen earlier in Asia, while U.S. futures point to another weak session. Today's tone is one of cautious de-risking, with markets showing little appetite to buy dips ahead of several major event risks.

          Technology stocks continue to drive the weakness. Selling pressure on Nvidia stayed intense ahead of the company's third-quarter results due after Wednesday's close. Nvidia has been the symbolic leader of the AI-driven market rally, and the reaction to its earnings could determine whether sentiment stabilizes or slips into a deeper correction. With concerns over market breadth, excessive valuations, and shaky AI fundamentals resurfacing, traders are positioning defensively.

          Attention is on Thursday's U.S. non-farm payrolls release — the first since the government reopened. Today's initial jobless claims, at 232k, and continuing claims, at 1.957m, produced almost no market reaction. That muted response raises doubts about how strongly markets will react to the delayed NFP, though the potential for a volatility shock should not be dismissed.

          In Japan, the highly anticipated meeting between Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi and BoJ Governor Kazuo Ueda offered far less clarity than markets had hoped. Traders were looking for sharper messaging on policy direction given rising political pressure on the central bank. Instead, the meeting produced broad, non-committal remarks that did little to shift expectations.

          Ueda reiterated that Japan's wage-price dynamics are improving thanks to both government policy and the BoJ's supportive stance. He described the central bank as "gradually adjusting" monetary support to ensure a stable path toward the 2% inflation goal. Takaichi, he said, appeared to accept his assessments. Yet nothing in his comments hinted at a change in stance or timeline.

          Asked about the timing of the next rate hike, Ueda repeated that decisions will be made "appropriately" based on incoming data — a stance that leaves the market no clearer about whether a December move is even on the table. Given the political backdrop, traders remain convinced that January or later is more likely.

          In FX, Dollar holds the top spot for the week so far, followed by Loonie and Sterling. At the other end of the spectrum, Aussie is the weakest performer, with Yen and Swiss Franc next in line. Kiwi and Euro sit squarely in the middle.

          In Europe, at the time of writing, FTSE is down -1.39%. DAX is down -1.42%. CAC is down -1.40%. UK 10-year yield is up 0.006 at 4.543. Germany 10-year yield is down -0.015 at 2.701. Earlier in Asia, Nikkei fell -3.22%. Hong Kong HSI fell -1.72%. China Shanghai SSE fell -0.81%. Singapore Strait Times fell -0.86%. Japan 10-year JGB yield rose 0.015 to 1.749.

          RBA minutes show no clear bias toward next move

          RBA minutes from the November 3–4 meeting underscored a Board that sees the economy as "broadly in balance" and saw no justification to adjust the cash rate at this stage. While the central projection remains aligned with the RBA's employment and inflation objectives, policymakers stressed that the next move in rates is not predetermined. Members agreed it was "not yet possible to be confident" about whether holding steady or easing further would become the more likely scenario.

          The minutes outlined several conditions that could support keeping policy unchanged. One is a stronger-than-expected recovery in "demand" that lifts employment. Another is if incoming data suggest the economy's "supply capacity" is weaker than previously assessed — potentially due to persistently high inflation or softer-than-expected productivity growth. A third is a reassessment of whether monetary policy is still "slightly restrictive". Any of these outcomes, the RBA said, would "limit the scope for further easing".

          But the Board also detailed circumstances that could justify another rate cut. A material weakening in the labor market remains the clearest trigger. A second downside risk is if GDP growth disappoints — for example, if households turn "more cautious about spending" than currently assumed. In these cases, excess capacity would likely reappear, cooling inflation and warranting additional support.

          Overall, the minutes confirm a central bank in wait-and-see mode. The RBA is not ruling out further easing, but neither is it leaning strongly toward it. The next several months of data — particularly on productivity, inflation persistence, and household spending — will be crucial in determining whether the Board holds steady or reopens the easing path in 2026.

          USD/JPY Mid-Day Outlook

          Daily Pivots: (S1) 154.43; (P) 154.86; (R1) 155.70;

          Intraday bias in USD/JPY remains on the upside for the moment. Current rise is part of the rally from 139.87. Next target is 100% projection of 146.58 to 153.26 from 149.37 at 156.05. Break there will pave the way to 158.85 key structural resistance. However, considering bearish divergence condition in 4H MACD, firm break of 153.60 support will indicate short term topping, and bring deeper pullback to 55 D EMA (now at 151.45).

          In the bigger picture, current development suggests that corrective pattern from 161.94 (2024 high) has completed with three waves at 139.87. Larger up trend from 102.58 (2021 low) could be ready to resume through 161.94 high. On the downside, break of 149.37 support will dampen this bullish view and extend the corrective pattern with another falling leg.

          Source: ACTIONFOREX

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
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          Stocks ‘Running Out of Time’ For a Year-End Rally Without Tech

          Adam

          Stocks

          Another brutal day on Wall Street has called into question whether US stocks can deliver during what is normally one of the strongest times of year.
          The main problem is with the high-flying technology stocks that have powered a 34% run in the S&P 500 since an April low. Their advance has stalled, leaving the market reliant on sectors more exposed to signs the economy is slowing and consumers are losing their mojo.
          The S&P 500 slid 0.9% Monday, pushing its drop in November to 2.5%. The index has gone 14 trading days without a record — itself hardly a cause for worry, but still the longest stretch since the 88 sessions between February and June, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The Magnificent Seven tech stocks are off nearly 5% this month, with only Alphabet Inc. in the green. That group has accounted for virtually all of the market’s gain this year.
          The artificial intelligence trade has started to wobble as investors worry the amount of borrowing needed to fund its buildout will become a burden. Just Monday, Amazon.com Inc. tapped the credit market for $15 billion in a bond sale. The economy is showing signs of slowing, particularly in the labor market, and low-end consumers appear increasingly under pressure. With technical indicators also flashing warnings — both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 closed below their average price for the past 50 days, for example — Wall Street strategists are questioning whether a year-end rally is in the cards.
          “We’re running out of time,” said Adam Turnquist, chief technical strategist at LPL Financial, adding that year-end rallies typically start at the beginning of November, not after a drawdown halfway through the month. He sees “more pain ahead,” as key indexes slide below key chart levels.
          The rest of the week is shaping up as critical for any run back toward all-time highs. Consumer giants like Walmart Inc., Home Depot Inc. and Target Corp. will deliver results and commentary on the looming holiday shopping period. Nvidia Corp. is the last of the big seven to give its business update. And government economic data, absent for the past seven weeks, will begin trickling out.
          For some analysts, though, the S&P 500 might’ve already notched its last high for the year.
          John Roque, head of technical analysis at 22V Research, said some “ugly” technical signals are cause for concern. Among them: The number of Nasdaq Composite components hitting 52-week lows outnumbers those hitting highs.
          “There is no way a market can rally with new lows outnumbering new highs,” he said by phone.
          Moreover, he sees Facebook-owner Meta Platforms Inc. as the “bellwether for this correction” because it started falling before its peers and may need to “make a low” before the current retreat in the market ends. The company’s spending plans for AI have alarmed investors worried any profits from the investments are in the distant future. Meta fell again on Monday, declining 1.2% and is now down 24% from its August peak.
          Stocks ‘Running Out of Time’ For a Year-End Rally Without Tech_1
          Turnquist said he’s seen investor rotation not only out of large-cap tech names, but also unprofitable tech, Bitcoin, meme stocks and heavily shorted names as “we have this defensive tone that is developing in the market.”
          The rotation from those risky pockets into more defensive corners of the market began last week. The top-performing sector in the S&P 500 was health care, which Turnquist said has been the biggest beneficiary of the trade out of high-momentum sectors.
          “The US momentum factor is sitting on multi-month support here and flirting with a breakdown,” said Emily Roland and Matt Miskin, co-chief investment strategists at Manulife John Hancock Investments. They warned that market action over the last week looked like “the ‘sell America’ trade was back from April.”
          To be sure, 2025 can still go down as a banner year for stocks even without a normal rally through the holidays.
          The current rotation — which continued Monday with health care and utilities outperforming — “should unwind some of the frothiness built into the growth sectors,” said Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at CFRA. The past two weeks have been turbulent as indexes have slumped, but right now, “hardly far enough to be labeled a pullback,” he said.
          Similarly, Ned Davis Research described the recent selloff as “contained enough” to keep prospects of a rally alive, but warned that “the longer the consolidation goes without reestablishing the uptrend, however, the higher the risk it evolves into a topping process.”

          source: Bloomberg

          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
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          As data flow revives, Fed still faces a deep policy divide

          Adam

          Economic

          A divided U.S. Federal Reserve begins receiving updated economic reports from the now-reopened federal government this week as policymakers hope for clarity in their debate over whether to cut interest rates when they meet in just over three weeks.
          It remains unclear how much of the shutdown-delayed data on employment, inflation, retail spending, economic growth, and other aspects of the economy will be in hand by then. As of Monday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said it would publish the delayed employment report for September on Thursday, but the White House has said some of the October reports may be skipped altogether, while data gathering for November may also be hampered by a shutdown that stretched to mid-month.
          But the lines of debate have been sharply drawn, and minutes of the Fed's October meeting to be released on Wednesday could provide more detail on the split that has emerged over whether the risk of higher inflation remains pronounced enough to delay rate cuts for now, or whether slowing job growth and looser monetary policy should take priority.
          "I am not worried about inflation accelerating or inflation expectations rising significantly," Fed Governor Christopher Waller said on Monday. "My focus is on the labor market, and after months of weakening, it is unlikely that the September jobs report later this week or any other data in the next few weeks would change my view that another cut is in order" when the Fed meets on December 9-10.
          Fed Vice Chair Philip Jefferson meanwhile said the central bank should go "slowly" given the benchmark interest rate, in the 3.75%-to-4.00% range, is likely nearing the level where it will no longer discourage economic activity and put downward pressure on inflation.
          Clear camps have formed within the central bank, with several Fed governors - all appointees of President Donald Trump - arguing for another cut, and several regional reserve bank presidents taking a hard line on inflation. Still, the intensity of those divisions may mask a narrower set of concerns about timing and the desire for more data to show a clearer direction for the economy.
          The Fed's approval of a quarter-percentage-point rate cut at the October 28-29 meeting included dissents in favor of both looser and tighter monetary policy, a rarity in recent decades. Afterward, Fed Chair Jerome Powell offered unusual, explicit guidance about the outcome of the December meeting.
          "There were strongly differing views about how to proceed in December. A further reduction in the policy rate at the December meeting is not a foregone conclusion - far from it," Powell said using language that pointed to a compromise with the policymakers most concerned about inflation.
          'GROWING CHORUS' FAVORS NO CUT IN DECEMBER
          Those remarks and other recent data have shifted market bets away from a December cut that previously had been given high odds. Policymaker projections in September showed officials themselves anticipated the benchmark interest rate would end the year in the 3.50%-to-3.75% range, a quarter-point below where it is now.
          Yet that outlook already showed the sharp division emerging, and some officials since then have intensified their concerns about higher inflation.
          "We've got this persistent high inflation that is sticking around. When all is said and done it will be the better part of a decade," said Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack, among three regional presidents who will take on voting roles next year and who have been among the more strident recently on the need to not rush further cuts because of inflation risks. "Getting (inflation) back to 2% is critical to our credibility," she told MarketWatch in an interview last week.
          The array of opinions and the potential gaps in official data pose a challenge for Powell in molding a consensus. Even if some dissents may be unavoidable, possible points of compromise include approving a rate cut at the December meeting but indicating that a pause is likely to follow, or pausing in December but pointing to likely further cuts depending on incoming data.
          Officials will issue new quarterly projections at the December meeting that could help reinforce either approach.
          The pace of the federal government's data catch-up could also matter. While U.S. central bankers feel they have enough ways to monitor the economy to make a decision, a full suite of catch-up reports could boost their confidence in whatever decision is made.
          Even that may fall short of what's needed to produce consensus in a body also facing a leadership transition, with Powell's term as chair ending in May and two of the sitting governors on a short list of possible Trump nominees to replace him.
          Some of the forces shaping the job market and inflation, meanwhile, have not been in place long enough for Fed officials to fully understand them. They have little certainty over whether slow job growth is part of the normal business cycle, a product of stricter immigration policy, an outgrowth of weakening demand due to tariffs and inflation, or the first signs artificial intelligence is changing staffing needs.
          What policymakers do see clearly right now is that inflation has not changed much in a year and remains about a percentage point above their 2% target.
          "A growing chorus of hawks, centrists and even previously dovish FOMC participants appear assured that the data is not likely to justify a rate cut," SGH Macro Advisors Chief U.S. Economist Tim Duy wrote. "We think they want convincing evidence that inflation will return to target," likely pushing any further cuts into next year.

          Source: Reuters

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
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