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Philadelphia Fed President Henry Paulson delivers a speech
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The Swiss National Bank's latest report warns of persistent economic uncertainty, citing global debt levels and overvalued assets, despite improved banking sector performance led by UBS....

The Swiss National Bank said on Thursday the economic and financial outlook is highly uncertain, particularly due to trade and geopolitical tensions, though it noted profitability for Swiss banks improved in 2024, driven by UBS.
"Several risk factors could amplify the impact of potential negative shocks on global economic and financial conditions," the SNB said in its 2025 Financial Stability Report.
The risks include public debt having climbed to near historical peaks globally, and valuations in global residential real estate, global corporate bonds and the U.S. stock market still appearing stretched.
The SNB takes account of these risk factors when designing its stress tests, assuming highly unfavourable developments that are unlikely but possible, the report said.
Profitability for the Swiss banking sector improved year on year in 2024, powered by UBS, it noted.
Capital ratios remained broadly stable, available capital buffers reflected significant loss-absorbing and lending capacity, and banks held substantial liquidity buffers, which contributed to their resilience, the report said.

The Bank of Japan is likely to hold off raising interest rates this year unless a dramatic, positive turn of events in U.S. tariffs allows it to overhaul gloomy projections made in May, its former top economist Seisaku Kameda said.
In a quarterly outlook report released on May 1, the BOJ cut its price forecasts and said underlying inflation will stagnate for some time as uncertainty on U.S. trade policy weighs on the export-reliant economy.
The BOJ also cut its growth forecasts for both fiscal 2025 and 2026, a sign it sees the damage from U.S. tariffs to intensify later this year and last through most of next year.
"I was surprised at how dovish the BOJ's May outlook report was," said Kameda, who is well-informed in how the central bank crafts the report and the interpretation of its language.
"Having said so clearly that underlying inflation will stagnate, it would take a very positive turn of events in U.S. tariff talks for the BOJ to justify raising rates any time soon," he told Reuters in an interview on Wednesday.
Japan's exports fell in May for the first time in eight months as automakers like Toyota were hit by sweeping U.S. tariffs. Tokyo's failure so far to clinch a trade deal with Washington will likely put more pressure on a fragile economic recovery.
Given the lack of progress in trade talks and a dearth of data to gauge the impact of U.S. tariffs, the BOJ is unlikely to make substantial revisions to its growth and price forecasts at the next outlook report due on July 31, Kameda said.
"If there's a very big, positive change in U.S. tariff developments, the BOJ would take that into account in its July report," Kameda said.
"If not, the BOJ might find it hard to revise up its gloomy inflation forecast for fiscal 2026, which is key to the next rate-hike timing," he said.
Under the current projections made on May 1, the BOJ expects core consumer inflation to hit 2.2% in the year ending in March 2026 before slowing to 1.7% the following year.
For the BOJ, the key would be whether corporate capital expenditure will hold up as the bank currently projects, Kameda said.
"The BOJ will also probably want to wait for clues on whether firms will remain keen to keep hiking wages next year, Kameda said. "That means any rate hike would have to wait until January or March next year."
The BOJ ended a decade-long, massive stimulus last year and raised short-term rates to 0.5% in January on the view Japan was on the cusp of sustainably achieving its 2% inflation target.
The Indian rupee is likely to extend its recent fall at the open on Thursday, bogged down by the U.S. dollar's overall strength and risk aversion amid the ongoing Iran-Israel conflict.
The 1-month non-deliverable forward indicated a open in the 86.54 to 86.58 range, versus 86.4775 in the previous session. The Indian rupee has declined 0.5% over the last two sessions, weakening past key support zones.
A currency trader at a bank said the next support lies at 86.70–86.75, which corresponds to the mid-April low.
"The rupee was already struggling with oil prices. Now, it has to deal with the dollar regaining some safe-haven appeal—at least that’s what the price action suggests," the trader said.
The dollar indexrose 0.2% on Thursday, climbing past the 99 mark. U.S. equity futures and Asian shares slipped, while the U.S. currency advanced 0.2% to 0.8% against Asian currencies on likely safe-haven demand.
Investor attention stayed fixed on the Iran-Israel conflict and the risk of U.S. involvement, with the two countries exchanging further air strikes on Thursday.
Asked outside the White House on Wednesday whether he had decided to support Israel’s air campaign, President Donald Trump said, "I may do it. I may not do it."
Markets have so far been complacent about the Iran-Israel battle, with sentiment broadly holding up, DBS research said in a note.
However, any direct U.S. involvement could trigger a deterioration in sentiment, it said.
Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve, in line with expectations, made no changes to the policy rate, while raising its inflation forecasts and trimming growth projections.
Analysts said the updated dot plot sent mixed signals. While the Fed maintained its forecast for two cuts in 2024, it trimmed the number of projected cuts for 2025 and 2026 by one each.
DBS noted that two cuts in 2025 are dovish, while the projections for 2026 and 2027 leaned hawkish.
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