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Tag: Commodity markets

  • Goldman Sachs expects ‘all time high’ oil demand to spur large deficits, boosting prices

    Goldman Sachs expects ‘all time high’ oil demand to spur large deficits, boosting prices

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    Oil storage tanks stand at the RN-Tuapsinsky refinery, operated by Rosneft Oil Co., at night in Tuapse, Russia.

    Andrey Rudakov | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Goldman Sachs expects record demand in oil markets to drive crude prices higher in the near term.

    “We expect pretty sizable deficits in the second half with deficits of almost 2 million barrels per day in the third quarter as demand reaches an all-time high,” Goldman’s head of oil research Daan Struyven told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia” on Monday.

    He added that the bank forecasts Brent crude to rise from just above $80 per barrel now to $86 per barrel by year-end.

    Global benchmark Brent futures traded 0.39% lower at $80.75 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate futures stood 0.42% at $76.75 per barrel.

    ‘Elevated demand uncertainty’

    While Struyven acknowledged that U.S. crude oil production has risen significantly over the past year to 12.7 million barrels per day, he said that pace of growth will slow throughout the rest of 2023.

    “We expect U.S. crude supply growth to slow down pretty significantly to a sequential pace of just 200 barrels per day from here,” he said, pointing to the decline in rig counts. That metric, which tallies the number of active oil rigs, is used as an indicator of drilling activity and future output.

    The U.S. oil rig count recently hit its lowest level in 16 months, down 15% from its late 2022 peak, a recent Goldman report observed, citing data from Baker Hughes and Haver.

    Last week, Baker Hughes reported U.S. oil rigs fell by 7 to 530 the lowest since March 2022.

    Struyven suggested that the lack of an agreement following the G20 energy ministers’ meeting indicates “very substantial” uncertainty about long-run oil demand.

    The Group of 20 energy ministers met in India over the weekend, but left without reaching a consensus on the phasing down of fossil fuels, complicating the transition toward clean energy.

    “Key point here for investors is, with the uncertainty about oil demand being so elevated, investors may require a premium to compensate for the for the elevated risk from such elevated demand uncertainty,” Struyven said.

    The International Energy Agency in June had predicted that global oil demand is on track to rise by 2.4 million barrels per day in 2023, outpacing the previous year’s 2.3 million barrel per day increase. 

    Over the weekend, secretary general of the International Energy Forum Joseph McMonigle had forecast that both India and China will make up 2 million barrels a day of demand pick-up in the second half of 2023.

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  • CNBC Daily Open: The long-awaited recession might not arrive

    CNBC Daily Open: The long-awaited recession might not arrive

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    People walk past the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on July 12, 2023 in New York City.

    Spencer Platt | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    This report is from today’s CNBC Daily Open, our new, international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Like what you see? You can subscribe here.

    What you need to know today

    Waiting for earnings
    U.S. stocks
    made slight gains Monday, but trading volume was lower than average as investors braced for second-quarter earning. European markets, on the other hand, fell. The regional Stoxx 600 index declined 0.6% as most sectors and bourses in the region fell.

    Separating the wheat from the people
    Russia terminated the Black Sea Grain Initiative, which allowed Ukraine to export food and fertilizers from three Ukrainian ports, hours before the agreement expired. The prices of wheat, corn and soybean all rose on the news. U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres previously described the deal as “indispensable” to global food security.

    Merger bonanza
    Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway reduced its stake in Activision Blizzard from 6.7% last year to 1.9% yesterday, according to a securities filing released Monday. The news comes as Microsoft inches closer to completing its $68.7 billion acquisition of Activision. Buffett previously revealed Berkshire added to its initial Activision stake in a bet the deal would close and cause shares to rise.

    Unraveling the Thread
    Meta’s Threads, its rival to Twitter, launched to great excitement. But not everyone is thrilled. House Judiciary Chair Jim Jordan has asked Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg to hand over documents about content moderation on Threads, according to a letter obtained exclusively by CNBC. The request is related to an ongoing investigation of technology platform’s policies.

    [PRO] The S&P 5,400
    Ed Yardeni, president of Yardeni Research and previously chief investment strategist at various financial institutions, thinks the S&P 500 could go on an extended bull run and hit a record high of 5,400 within the next 18 months. Here’s why the market veteran is so optimistic.

    The bottom line

    Investors were cautiously optimistic yesterday.

    Major U.S. indexes edged up. The Dow Jones Industrial Average advanced 0.22% to hit its highest close this year. The S&P 500 gained 0.39% and the Nasdaq Composite climbed 0.93%.

    It should be noted, however, that trading volume was muted. The SPDR S&P 500 exchange-traded fund, which tracks the overall index, traded 52.4 million shares, below its 30-day average of 79.1 million.

    The slower pace of trading makes sense. Major companies are due to release their earnings reports, starting with Bank of America and Morgan Stanley on Tuesday as well as Goldman Sachs, Netflix and Tesla on Wednesday.  

    Investors braced for those reports — and they aren’t expecting good news. Analysts think second-quarter S&P 500 earnings will be more than 7% lower than they were a year ago, according to FactSet data.

    But the good news is last quarter’s earnings might be the floor. And things are looking up, not just for markets, but the economy. The long-awaited U.S. recession? Many analysts now think it’s not merely late — it might not even show up.

    With both consumer and producer price indexes cooling more than expected, “bringing inflation down to an acceptable level will not require a recession,” Goldman Sachs’ chief economist Jan Hatzius wrote, cutting his projection of a recession from 25% to 20%.

    JPMorgan Chase’s chief global markets strategist Marko Kolanovic has been skeptical of a soft landing. But even he noted that “the resilience of the US and global expansions should remain in place,” causing the bank to “downplay near-term recession risks.”

    And Ed Yardeni thinks the recession — albeit “a rolling recession,” meaning that different sectors of the economy have taken turns to contract — is already behind us. Instead, “now … we’re in a rolling recovery,” Yardeni said.

    As earnings reports are released, don’t look at companies’ figures for the past quarter. Keep an eye out for their projections for the rest of the year. We might yet see signs of hope the economy will continue growing.

     

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  • Gold should be dead, but somehow it’s still adding value

    Gold should be dead, but somehow it’s still adding value

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    Why isn’t gold dead yet?

    It hasn’t served a vital economic function since the government stopped treating it as money back in 1971. Actually, you could argue it stopped being necessary long before that.

    Yes, some people prefer it in jewelry. It is used in some technological equipment, and sometimes, still, in dentistry. But so what? According to authoritative data from the World Gold Council, even all those uses only account for about half of the world’s supply each year. Logically, this should mean that there is a gigantic glut of gold and that its price would be in free fall.

    But it isn’t. Gold is beating U.S. stocks and bonds this month. And this isn’t even a rarity. I’ve run some numbers and have found a couple of things that could be very important to retirees, and for all of us suckers saving for retirement.

    Even though, according to traditional financial theory, they really make no sense at all.

    Don’t miss: Gold headed for best week since March after U.S. inflation reports

    Also see: Why gold will beat the stock market in the coming weeks

    The first thing is that over the past century including some gold in your portfolio alongside stocks and bonds has genuinely added value. It has produced higher average returns, less volatility and fewer of those disastrous “lost decades” where your portfolio ended up whistling Dixie.

    The second thing is that this peculiarity has been showing no signs of letting up in recent years or decades — even though, if anything, gold makes even less sense today than it used to.

    Let me explain.

    As usual, I’ve tapped the excellent database maintained by the NYU Stern School of Business, which tracks asset values going back to 1928.

    Over that period, a conventional so-called balanced portfolio invested 60% in the S&P 500
    SPY,
    -0.06%

    index of large-company stocks and 40% in U.S. 10-year Treasury bonds
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.832%

    has generated an average return of 4.9% a year in “real” terms, meaning above inflation.

    A portfolio that’s 60% invested in the S&P 500, 30% in the bonds and 10% in gold
    GC00,
    -0.26%

    earned a slightly higher average, 5.1% a year in real terms. But the volatility was lower: The portfolio that included the gold had a lower standard deviation of returns, and a much higher “median” return, meaning the middlemost return if you ranked all the years from best to worst. The portfolio including gold beat the traditional one by five full percentage points in total over the typical 10-year period, and failed to keep up with inflation for 10 years on only five occasions — half as often as the portfolio consisting exclusively of stocks and bonds.

    Nor is this just about olden times. The portfolio including 10% gold has beaten the traditional 60/40 by an average of 0.4 percentage point a year since President Richard Nixon finally killed the gold standard in 1971. And it has beaten the traditional portfolio by the same amount, an average of four-tenths of a percentage point, so far this millennium. (The 60/40 portfolio has done better if you start measuring only in 1980, as that ignores the golden 1970s but includes the long bear market for gold of the 1980s and 1990s.)

    And gold has added value in five of the last seven years (while in the other two it was effectively a tie).

    It’s not so much that gold is a great long-term investment on its own. It’s that gold has seemed to shine when others, specifically stocks and bonds, have failed. And it still does. It held up during the crash of 1929-32. But it also held up during the crash in 2002. And in 2008. And 2020.

    A financial expert told me this was “hindsight bias.” But so is most financial analysis.

    When your financial adviser tells you what you might reasonably expect from large stocks, small stocks, international stocks, real estate and so forth in the decades ahead, he or she is basing that on history. (In some cases this has been downright hilarious, as when advisers said you should still expect “average” historical returns of 5% a year from Treasurys, even when they had only a 2% yield.)

    I’m danged if I know why. But so far this year, once again, you’ve been better off in a portfolio of 60% stocks, 30% bonds and 10% gold than in just 60% stocks and 40% bonds. Make of it what you will.

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  • Stock market today: Asian shares jump on Wall Street’s return to its highest level in over a year

    Stock market today: Asian shares jump on Wall Street’s return to its highest level in over a year

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    TOKYO — Asian shares rose Thursday, boosted by Wall Street’s return to its highest level in more than a year after a report showed U.S. consumer inflation cooled a bit more than expected last month.

    Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 jumped 1.5% in afternoon trading to 32,425.69.

    Hong Kong’s Hang Seng surged 2.6% to 19,357.96, while the Shanghai Composite gained 1.3% to 3,236.86, even as China reported a slump in trade in June.

    Chinese exports tumbled 12.4% in June from a year earlier as demand weakened after central banks raised interest rates to curb inflation even as Chinese leaders struggled to keep a post-COVID recovery from faltering. The customs data released Thursday showed imports slid 6.8%, while the trade surplus rose was $70.6 billion, rising from $65.8 billion in May.

    “China will likely recover at some point, but we will unlikely see the Chinese growth put a severe pressure on commodity markets. That’s one good news for inflation watchers,” Ipek Ozkardeskaya, senior analyst at Swissquote Bank, said in a commentary.

    Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 added 1.7% to 7,253.50. South Korea’s Kospi rose 0.8% to 2,595.51.

    Wednesday on Wall Street, the S&P 500 rose 0.7% to 4,472.16 to reach its strongest closing level since April 2022. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.3% to 34,347.43, and the Nasdaq composite gained 1.2% to 13,918.96.

    Most stocks rose, from flashy Big Tech behemoths to staid utility companies, though the gains faded a bit as the day progressed.

    The U.S. government’s latest update on inflation showed that consumers paid prices for gasoline, food and other items that were 3% higher overall in June than a year earlier. That’s down from 4% inflation in May and a bit more than 9% last summer. Perhaps more importantly, it was a touch lower than economists expected.

    High inflation has been at the center of Wall Street’s problems because it’s driven the Federal Reserve to jack up interest rates at a blistering pace. Higher rates undercut inflation by slowing the entire economy and hurting investment prices, and they’ve already caused damage to the banking, manufacturing and other industries.

    Traders remain nearly convinced the Fed will raise the federal funds rate at its meeting in two weeks to a range of 5.25% to 5.50%, which would be its highest level since 2001. But expectations are also climbing for that to be the final increase after rates started last year at virtually zero.

    Treasury yields tumbled in the bond market after the cooler inflation data pushed traders to trim bets for Fed action later this year.

    The 10-year Treasury yield fell to 3.86% from 3.98% late Tuesday. It helps set rates for mortgages and other important loans.

    The two-year Treasury yield dropped to 4.73% from 4.89%. It tends to follow expectations for the Fed more closely.

    A resilient job market has helped to keep the economy out of a recession, though it’s also under pressure from higher rates. The latest “Beige Book” from the Federal Reserve on Wednesday said that overall economic activity has increased slightly since late May. It also said several Fed districts have noticed some slowing in inflation.

    In energy trading, benchmark U.S. crude rose 19 cents to $75.94 a barrel. Brent crude, the international standard, gained 25 cents to $80.36 a barrel.

    In currency trading, the U.S. dollar edged up to 138.71 Japanese yen from 138.41 yen. The euro cost $1.1138, up from $1.1128.

    ___

    AP Business Writer Zen Soo contributed.

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  • India’s tomato prices surge over 300%, sparking theft and turmoil

    India’s tomato prices surge over 300%, sparking theft and turmoil

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    A vendor arranging tomatoes at a wholesale vegetable market in Kolkata. Tomato prices surged 366.86% from 26.76 rupees per kg at the start of the year to 108.92 rupees per kg as of July 11.

    Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images

    India is facing a tomato crisis as prices have skyrocketed more than 300% due to extreme weather conditions.

    Tomato prices surged 341% year-to-date, from 24.68 rupees per kg to 108.92 rupees per kg as of July 11, data from the Department of Consumer Affairs showed.

    Flooding in major tomato producing states like Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, Karnataka has been a key driver to the price surge, according to India’s National Institute of Biotic Stresses Management, a council dedicated to agricultural research.

    “Due to excess rainfall in these states, tomato [crops have] been highly affected… A large part of the tomato crop has been destroyed due to rains and flood,” the council stated.

    India is the second largest producer of tomatoes in the world, and alongside onions, tomatoes are “an absolute essential” to the daily lives of Indian consumers, said Damien Yeo, food and drink analyst at BMI, a Fitch Solutions research unit. 

    Masala, one of the most popular dishes in Indian cuisine, uses tomatoes as a key ingredient in its base sauce. Another popular Indian dish, the Andhra Tomato Kura (tomato curry) is also widely enjoyed by locals.

    Paan prepared with masala. Masala, one of the most commonly consumed dishes in Indian cuisine, uses tomatoes as a key ingredient in its base sauce.

    Indiapictures | Universal Images Group | Getty Images

    Local farmers reported large-scale thefts of their tomato crops, with one report chronicling how thieves took off with boxes of tomatoes weighing some 150kg.

    Several McDonald’s outlets in India have also decided to drop tomatoes from their menu.

    “This is a seasonal problem that the restaurant and food industry has to face every monsoon,” the West and South franchise of McDonald’s India said in a statement.

    In a bid to generate new ideas on how to improve India’s tomato value chain and lower prices, the government has invited the public to a Tomato Grand Challenge Hackathon.

    Prices of tomatoes generally soar during the growing season of June and July before the August harvest period, Yeo told CNBC.

    “The above-average temperature over June and July 2023, plus the late start to the 2023 southwest monsoon has affected production,” he said.

    Expectations are that the summer crop supplies might arrive next month, helping to calm prices…

    Radhika Rao

    Senior Economist, DBS Bank

    He said the rise of the tomato mosaic virus in recent years has also resulted in varying degrees of crop damage, ranging from partial to total losses. The disease is characterized by mottling or mosaic appearance on foliage, and may lead to a reduction in size, quality and amount of the yield.

    Compared to July last year, tomato prices have surged 166% according to government data. Consequently, India’s inflation print is likely to have risen 4.58% year-on-year in June as food prices soared, according to a poll by Reuters.

    Prices of tomatoes, onions and potatoes are usually “highly volatile,” and face relatively inelastic demand as they are staples consumed by Indian locals, said DBS Bank’s Senior Economist Radhika Rao.

    That said, prices of tomatoes could come to simmer next month when harvesting begins, the analysts forecast.

    “Expectations are that the summer crop supplies might arrive next month, helping to calm prices, ahead of which administrative measures including higher imports might be resorted to,” said Rao.

    Similarly, BMI’s Yeo said August’s tomato harvests will start to come — and even if it’s low, the new volume could bring some relief to prices.

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  • Latest News – MarketWatch

    Latest News – MarketWatch

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    Singapore’s Temasek says FTX investment was an aberration

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  • Commodities Sizzled, Then Fizzled. What’s Next. 

    Commodities Sizzled, Then Fizzled. What’s Next. 

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    The Commodity Rally Has Paused. What’s Next for Oil, Copper, and Producers’ Stocks.

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  • Oil prices end at a 2-week high on reports Saudi Arabia said OPEC+ will do ‘whatever necessary’ to support oil

    Oil prices end at a 2-week high on reports Saudi Arabia said OPEC+ will do ‘whatever necessary’ to support oil

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    Oil futures settle at their highest in two weeks on Wednesday, finding support after Saudi Arabia’s energy minister reportedly said that the kingdom and its allies will do whatever is necessary to support the oil market.

    The comments from Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman at an OPEC+ seminar was reported by a number of news agencies and follows the Saudi’s announcement Monday that it would extend its voluntary production cut by another month, through August.

    Tensions…

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  • Dow gives back earlier gains, stocks end lower after Russia’s brief rebellion

    Dow gives back earlier gains, stocks end lower after Russia’s brief rebellion

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    U.S. stocks closed lower Monday, after Russia on the weekend was rocked by a brief revolt from the Wagner mercenary force. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    -0.04%

    fell about 11 points, or less than 0.1%, ending near 33,715, according to preliminary FactSet data, giving up earlier gains in the final moments of trade. The S&P 500 index
    SPX,
    -0.45%

    fell 0.4%, while the Nasdaq Composite Index
    COMP,
    -1.16%

    closed down 1.2%. Stocks have been struggling to extend a recent rally driven by a handful of technology stocks that earlier in June lifted major indexes to their highest levels in more than a year. Investors and oil markets were on edge Monday after a brief mutiny in Russia over the weekend raised concerns about potential disruptions to global oil supplies. U.S. crude prices edged higher Monday, with West Texas Intermediate oil for August
    CL00,
    +0.53%

    CLQ23,
    +0.53%

    ending slightly below $70 a barrel.

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  • These Drilling Stocks Could Be Gushers as the Oil Industry Rebounds

    These Drilling Stocks Could Be Gushers as the Oil Industry Rebounds

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    Offshore oil drillers were about the worst place to be in 2020 as oil prices were falling and demand for crude seemed to be seeping away. Now, the stocks may be the ones to own as investors realize that oil will be needed to make the world go around for decades.

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  • Rebellion in Russia could trigger selloff in U.S. stocks and flight to safe assets, analysts say. Here’s what investors should know.

    Rebellion in Russia could trigger selloff in U.S. stocks and flight to safe assets, analysts say. Here’s what investors should know.

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    Watch what happens over the next 36 hours.

    That was the advice from one financial analyst as U.S. investors awoke on Saturday to news of an apparent armed rebellion against Moscow led by Yevgeny Prigozhin, the owner of the powerful Russian mercenary organization Wagner Group.

    Others speculated that the crisis in Russia could drive U.S. stocks lower, as some traders were already betting on a selloff once markets reopen on Monday due to this sudden spike in geopolitical risk.

    “The developments in Russia are ultimately going to suggest President Putin’s leadership is weakening quickly and that resources may shift away from the war with Ukraine. It is too early to say how this will impact Wall Street, but the risk of desperate measures from Putin might make some investors nervous,” Edward Moya, senior market analyst at Oanda, said Saturday.

    A simmering feud between Prigozhin, the leader of the military contractor whose mercenary forces have been fighting alongside Russian military troops in Ukraine, and the Russian Defense Ministry came to a head early Saturday as Prigozhin led his troops to successfully overtake a Russian military outpost near the Ukrainian frontier, which the Kremlin has used as its command center for overseeing the war in Ukraine.

    Amid the mixture of reliable information and unfounded speculation, market analysts have scrambled to make sense of the situation and what it might mean for financial markets and the global economy.

    The main theme that has emerged so far is that U.S. stocks would suffer unless the Russian military managed to quickly suppress the rebellion, as may have occurred with reports late Saturday that Prigozhin had halted a Wagner advance on Moscow and, in fact, might be relocating to neighboring Belarus. But how would something that could potentially cut short the war in Ukraine — which has been a bugbear for markets since the full-scale invasion by Russian forces in February 2022 — be a negative for stocks?

    The answer is that chaos leads to uncertainty, and that uncertainty is anathema to markets — especially when it could disrupt global oil and food supplies.

    “I’d bet on this creating more uncertainty which is generally going to be negative for risk … in the short term at least you see higher geopolitical risk premia — longer term the risks are on both sides really: does this precipitate the collapse of the Russian front and the war ends?” said Neil Wilson, chief market analyst at Finalto, in a note to clients on Saturday.

    Others noted that the crisis is coming at a vulnerable time for U.S. markets, while Michael Antonelli, a market strategist at R.W. Baird & Co., suggested in a tweet that the crisis “has to be” bearish for U.S. stocks.

    The S&P 500 index
    SPX,
    -0.77%

    closed out its worst week since March on Friday as a series of interest-rate hikes in the U.K. and across Europe last week sparked fresh fears of a global recession. Some analysts noted that the pullback swiftly followed signs that investors are growing more bullish following a powerful rally that sent stocks to their highest levels in 14 months. There are concerns that this shift in sentiment could presage investors’ final capitulation.

    Sven Henrich, founder and lead strategist of Northman Trader, noted that the Cboe Volatility Index
    VIX,
    +4.11%
    ,
    the market’s so-called fear gauge, which measures the stock market’s expectations for volatility over the next 30 days, managed to finish last week below 13.5, its lowest level since January 2020, even as stocks pulled back.

    If stocks do continue to slide, that would mean new lows for the Vix have proved to be a reliable counterindicator, suggesting that investors had grown complacent before being walloped by a fresh shock.

    Asian markets will be the first to react to ongoing developments by Sunday evening Eastern time, but derivatives traders using CME Group’s Globex platform to trade swaps tracking the value of U.S. equity indexes are already betting on a selloff.

    Meanwhile, bitcoin
    BTCUSD,
    +0.11%
    ,
    an asset that does reliably trade 24/7, was down just 0.8% at $30,675, a slight pullback after achieving its highest level in a year late last week. By Saturday evening the leading cryptocurrency has reversed that earlier dip.

    Where might investors turn for safety if markets do become chaotic?

    Finalto’s Wilson said investors could seek shelter in the currency market, where the U.S. dollar
    DXY,
    +0.47%
    ,
    Swiss franc
    USDCHF,
    -0.02%

    and maybe the euro
    EURUSD,
    +0.32%

    and British pound
    GBPUSD,
    +0.02%

    could benefit from a spike in demand. More “de-risking” could send investors into ultrasafe government bonds like U.S. Treasurys
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.741%
    ,
    which could help to push yields lower, as bond yields move inversely to prices.

    Wilson anticipated that European indexes could be “more exposed to de-risking due to makeup and proximity to Russia and the war in Ukraine.” He also noted the possibility that this latest crisis could send the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    -1.01%

    higher if investors decided to seek shelter in high-quality growth names like Apple Inc.
    AAPL,
    -0.17%
    ,
    Nvidia Corp.
    NVDA,
    -1.90%

    or Microsoft Corp.
    MSFT,
    -1.38%
    ,
    which have helped to drive this year’s equity-market rally.

    Whatever happens, the outcome of the crisis should be more clear within the next 35 hours, Wilson said.

    “[H]ow the market opens after the weekend will depend on what happens in the next 36 hours. … [I]t could all be over by then,” Wilson said.

    Regardless, one of the first to interpret the market’s reaction on Monday will be Melbourne-based Chris Weston, head of research at online broker Pepperstone.

    Until then, he cautioned investors against reading too much into the Wagner situation, since analysts’ visibility into a very complicated geopolitical situation is “poor.”

    “The humble market participant would simply say they have no edge in knowing how this plays out and our visibility to read this through to markets is currently poor — the information is often biased and it’s hard to truly know what is fact and what is fed to influence. … [W]ill this lead to genuine regime change, fail or perhaps inflame and lead to a market shock?” Weston said in comments provided to MarketWatch.

    “At this point we simply don’t know, but it feels like we get enough clarity on potential outcomes and even timelines in the next 24-48 hours — at this point the prospect of modest downside risk on Monday is elevated and naturally we’ll be watching crude and EU assets most closely,” he said.

    Terry Haines, founder of Pangea Policy, said in an email to clients that the ongoing uncertainty fueled by the Wagner rebellion reveals the fragility of the Putin regime, and might marginally boost chances of a Ukraine victory.

    But Haines also conceded that it’s a “developing and unstable situation with various facets that on net add to geopolitical uncertainties, to which markets usually react negatively.” Investors must also consider that, should that rebellion fail, it could be “replaced by stronger Russian control” or create further instability as “Wagner disintegrates.”

    In that same vein, Jim Bianco, head of Bianco Research, offered up a joke aimed at all the armchair geopolitical analysts suddenly flocking to Twitter.

    Markets may take a look at this crisis and view it as a “bullish development after some initial volatility, the Kobeissi Letter’s editor in chief and founder, Adam Kobeissi, told MarketWatch in Saturday comments.

    “After all, the end of the war in Ukraine is the market’s top geopolitical driver right now, and if this increases the odds of a peace agreement and/or Russia withdrawing from Ukraine, it is likely to be perceived as bullish over the next few weeks,” he said.

    He recommended that investors keep an eye on prices of oil and gold, which could be particularly sensitive to any fresh developments.

    “If this means more conflict,” he said, “then oil
    CL.1,
    +0.51%
    ,
    bonds
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.741%

    and gold
    GC00,
    +0.04%

    are poised to rally.”

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  • Diamond prices have fallen 18% from their peak — and analysts say there’s still more room to plunge

    Diamond prices have fallen 18% from their peak — and analysts say there’s still more room to plunge

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    Diamond rings and bracelets on display in a show window in Antwerp, Belgium. (Photo by Yuriko Nakao/Getty Images)

    Yuriko Nakao | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    “Diamonds are a girl’s best friend,” as the old song goes.

    But they’re not an investor’s favorite currently, with the precious gems losing some significant value over the last few months.

    Diamond prices are down 18% from their all-time highs in February 2022, and are lower 6.5% year-to-date, according to one Global Rough Diamond Price Index. And their value is about to dive further, market watchers predict.

    “A slightly better-than-average-quality 1-carat natural diamond was $6,700 a year ago, today this same diamond is selling for $5,300,” Paul Zimnisky, the CEO of Paul Zimnisky Diamond Analytics, told CNBC.

    Diamonds, alongside other jewelry, saw elevated prices during the Covid-19 pandemic which culminated in a peak early last year.

    “Consumers were ready to spend,” management consulting firm Bain & Company said in a report dated February last year. “They were flush with cash from buoyant capital markets and economic stimulus programs, and eager to spend it on meaningful gifts for their loved ones,” they said.

    A diamond necklace in a Harrods department store in London.

    Leon Neal | Afp | Getty Images

    When people could not travel or eat out, all of that excess money went into luxury goods and jewelry, said CEO of online jeweler Angara, Ankur Daga.

    And when the economy started opening up again, diamond prices started moderating, and slid into a “steep decline,” he added.

    Continued competition from man-made diamonds, a slower Chinese economic recovery and an uncertain macroeconomic backdrop are also drivers of a lackluster market, according to industry experts.

    A ‘perfect substitute?’

    An increasing amount of consumers are turning to lab-grown diamonds, said Edahn.

    “The share of lab grown diamond sales versus natural diamonds is rising. In 2020, they were just 2.4%. In 2023 to date they are already up to 9.3%,” he said.

    Lab-grown diamonds are made in a controlled environment using extreme pressure and heat that recreates how natural diamonds are forged hundreds of kilometers in the Earth’s mantle.

    They are chemically, physically and optically identical to natural diamonds, and are deemed to be a “perfect substitute,” Daga said. But more importantly for most — they are a lot cheaper.

    And more people are turning to them for their choice of engagement rings.

    “Lab is indistinguishable over mined diamond, and if I can get a bigger diamond for the same price, why not?” said 29-year-old Singaporean Jonathan Lok, who proposed to his fiancée with a 0.76 carat lab-grown diamond ring late last year.

    He added that his fiancée had specified for a smaller diamond, and did not want him to spend an exorbitant amount on the ring.

    Colorless lab-grown diamonds at the Diam Concept laboratory in Paris, France, on March 16, 2023. Lab grown diamonds are made in a controlled environment using extreme pressure and heat that recreates how natural diamonds are forged hundreds of kilometers in the earth’s mantle.

    Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Prices of lab-grown diamonds have been “nosediving,” said Edahn Golan, the CEO of Edahn Golan Diamond Research & Data, with prices sinking 59% in the last three years.

    “Three years ago, you would be able to buy a lab grown equivalent 20% to 30% off of the natural price. Now it’s anywhere between 75% and 90% off natural prices,” Daga said, attributing the cheaper prices to machines becoming more efficient in producing more man-made diamonds.

    The lab-grown diamond industry, which is energy-intensive, have also been seeing soaring energy costs taper off from its peak.

    In the bear case scenario, he expects natural diamond prices to record a drop of between 20% to 25% from current prices in the next 12 months, which would mark a 40% drop off the February peak. And Daga is not alone.

    “There is room for continued price declines, and that is a very likely scenario, especially since retailer margins for lab grown diamonds are especially high, around 60% compared with 34% for natural diamonds,” said Golan.

    However, even so, the plunge could eventually hit a “natural floor” due to labor costs.

    “Labor costs have been going up still, and labor is still a very critical part of producing the diamond. So there is a natural floor somewhere,” Daga said, adding that a flatline will follow after a 25% drop.

    Haul trucks driving down Jwaneng Diamond Mine in Jwaneng, Botswana, on May 11, 2023.

    Monirul Bhuiyan | Afp | Getty Images

    Sanctions on Russian diamonds

    Additionally, diamond market watchers are not expecting sanctions on the world’s leading producer, Russia, to lead to severe price spikes.

    Earlier in May, the G7 economies convened a discussion on imposing sanctions on Russian diamonds, with the United Kingdom taking the lead in sanctioning Russia’s state-owned company Alrosa.

    “The Russians have ramped up diamond sales in recent months in an attempt to claw back market share lost last year following the disruption in trading,” Zimnisky stated.

    Russia is the world’s largest producers of diamond, followed by Botswana and the Democratic Republic of Congo, according to the Diamond Registry.

    According to Edahn, Russia will face no issues selling its diamonds despite the sanctions, especially if the larger buyers continue to take a shine to Moscow’s prized stones.

    “Countries like India, UAE, and even the EU, didn’t place sanctions on rough diamond imports. So again, no real shortages,” he said.

    India is the world’s top diamond importer, with the U.S. coming in second, followed by Hong Kong, Belgium and the UAE.

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  • Stocks end sharply higher, S&P 500 scores longest win streak since 2021

    Stocks end sharply higher, S&P 500 scores longest win streak since 2021

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    U.S. stocks booked big gains on Thursday, a day after the Federal Reserve skipped a June rate hike, but indicated more increases could be on the table this year. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    +1.26%

    jumped about 430 points, or 1.3%, ending near 34,409, according to preliminary FactSet data, while the S&P 500 index
    SPX,
    +1.22%

    gained 1.2% to score a sixth session in a row of wins and its longest stretch of straight gains since Nov. 8, 2021, according to Dow Jones Market Data. The Nasdaq Composite Index
    COMP,
    +1.15%

    closed up 1.2%. The rally for stocks comes in the wake of the S&P 500 emerging from its longest bear market in decades, with shares of big technology companies continuing to lead the index higher on Thursday. Its Communications Services segment rose 1.5% Thursday, while the Information Technology sector gained 1.3%, according to FactSet. Critics of the rally have pointed to exuberance around new advances in artificial intelligence helping lift a select set of seven stocks higher. One of those stocks, Microsoft Corp.
    MSFT,
    +3.19%

    rose about 3.5% to $349, per preliminary data, a record close on Thursday.

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  • Goldman Sachs slashes oil price forecast by nearly 10% as Russian supply recovers

    Goldman Sachs slashes oil price forecast by nearly 10% as Russian supply recovers

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    The Johan Sverdrup oil field in the North Sea

    Carina Johansen | AFP | Getty Images

    Goldman Sachs analysts slashed their oil price forecast by almost 10% on the back of whey they see as increasing supply and slower demand for crude.

    According to a report released late Sunday, the investment bank lowered its Brent outlook for December to $86 a barrel, down from $95 a barrel. In the same report, Goldman also revised down its WTI forecast for December from $89 per barrel to $81.

    The revised projection marks Goldman’s third downward revision in six months, and comes in spite of last week’s announcement that OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia is cutting production by another million barrels per day, effective July. Overall, the oil cartel made no changes to its planned oil production cuts for the rest of the year.

    “Significant supply beats from Iran and Russia have driven speculative positioning to near record-lows,” Goldman analysts led by the bank’s Global Head of Commodities Research Jeffrey Currie said in the research report.

    Russia’s oil production has remained resilient even in the face of Western sanctions, with Deputy Energy Minister Pavel Sorokin in April ascertaining that Moscow’s oil production will remain stable until 2025, according to the Neftegazovaya Vertikal magazine.

    “After an initial sharp 1.5 million barrels per day drop, Russian supply has nearly fully recovered despite the decision by many companies to stop buying Russian barrels,” Goldman’s economists said.

    The bank made upward revisions for oil supply forecasts coming from nations facing sanctions, with “2024 upgrades for Russia, Iran, and Venezuela of 0.4/0.35/0.05 mb/d, respectively.”

    While reports of an interim nuclear deal between the U.S. and Iran have been described as false, market watchers have previously estimated that a successful agreement could see at least an additional million barrels a day in crude exports.

    “Hope of a U.S.-Iran deal within grasp is one thing. But guarantee of a quick and unencumbered passage of such a complex, layered deal is quite another,” Mizuho’s Vishnu Varathan said in a daily research note.

    Goldman is of the view that the additional cuts implemented by Saudi Arabia are unlikely to result in a price spike, even as the kingdom’s output will see a decline to 9 million barrels per day from around 10 million barrels in May.

    “The extra Saudi cut and our expectation that OPEC+ will extend half of its April voluntary cut in 2024 will likely only partly offset these bearish shocks,” the report continued.

    International benchmark Brent crude futures traded at $73.99 a barrel, down 1.07%, on Monday morning, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate futures stood at $69.43, dipping 1.05%.

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  • U.S. oil futures fall for the session, lose more than 2% for the week

    U.S. oil futures fall for the session, lose more than 2% for the week

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    Oil futures declined on Friday to tally a loss of more than 2% for the week. Prices had started the week moving higher after Saudi Arabia said it would cut output by an additional 1 million barrels per day in July. However, “traders faded the move,” as the Saudi cut would only remove one-third of a single day’s worth of global oil production over the course of July, said Tyler Richey, co-editor at Sevens Report Research. That will “not meaningfully impact supply and demand dynamics.” July West Texas Intermediate crude
    CLN23,
    -1.33%

    fell $1.12, or 1.6%, to settle at $70.17 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. For the week, prices based on the front-month contract fell 2.2%.

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  • China trade tumbles in May, adding to signs economic recovery is slowing

    China trade tumbles in May, adding to signs economic recovery is slowing

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    China’s exports fell 7.5% from a year earlier in May and imports were down 4.5%, adding to signs an economic recovery is slowing

    ByJOE McDONALD AP Business Writer

    Driverless trucks move shipping containers at an automated port in Tianjin, China, Monday, Jan. 16, 2023. China’s exports fell 7.5% from a year ago in May, 2023, and imports were down 4.5%, adding to signs an economic recovery is slowing. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)

    The Associated Press

    BEIJING — China’s exports fell 7.5% from a year earlier in May and imports were down 4.5%, adding to signs an economic rebound following the end of anti-virus controls is slowing as global demand weakens under pressure from higher interest rates.

    Exports slid to $283.5 billion, reversing from April’s unexpectedly strong 8.5% growth, customs data showed Wednesday. Imports fell to $217.7 billion, moderating from the previous month’s 7.9% contraction. China‘s global trade surplus narrowed by 16.1% to $65.8 billion.

    Trade weakness adds to downward pressure on the world’s second-largest economy following lackluster factory and consumer activity and a surge in unemployment among young people.

    Factory output and consumer spending revived after controls that cut off access to major cities for weeks at a time and blocked most international travel were lifted in December. But forecasters say the peak of that rebound probably has passed.

    Retail spending is recovering more slowly than expected because jittery consumers worry about the economic outlook and possible job losses. A government survey in April found a record 1 in 5 young workers in cities were unemployed.

    Factory activity is contracting and employers are cutting jobs after interest rate hikes to cool inflation in the United States and Europe depressed demand for Chinese exports.

    Exports to the United States tumbled 18.2% from a year earlier to $42.5 billion after the Federal Reserve raised its benchmark lending rate to a 16-year high to curb surging inflation by slowing business and consumer activity.

    Imports of American goods sank 9.9% to $14.3 billion. China’s politically volatile trade surplus with the United States narrowed by 21.9% to $28.1 billion.

    China’s economic growth accelerated to 4.5% over a year earlier in the three months ending in March from the previous quarter’s 2.9%. It would need to accelerate further to reach the ruling Communist Party’s official growth target of “around 5%” for the year.

    For the year to date, imports fell 6.7% from the same five-month period of 2022 to just over $1 trillion, while export growth fell close to zero. Exports edged up 0.3% to $1.4 trillion.

    Imports from Russia, mostly oil and gas, rose 10% over a year ago to $11.3 billion. Exports to Russia surged 114% to $9.3 billion.

    China is buying more Russian energy to take advantage of price cuts, helping to shore up the Kremlin’s cash flow after the United States, Europe and Japan cut off most purchases to punish Moscow for President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.

    Beijing can buy Russian oil and gas without triggering Western sanctions. China has become Russia’s biggest export market and an important source of manufactured goods.

    Also in May, China’s imports from the 27-nation European Union fell 38.6% to $24.5 billion. Exports to Europe fell 26.6% to $44.6 billion. Beijing’s trade surplus with Europe narrowed by 3% to $20.1 billion.

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  • El Nino is approaching and your next cup of coffee could be at risk

    El Nino is approaching and your next cup of coffee could be at risk

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    A cup of Espresso coffee in Cascais, Portugal on October 11, 2021.

    Nikolas Kokovlis | Nurphoto | Getty Images

    Extreme weather conditions brought on by an approaching El Nino are fueling concerns that robusta beans in major coffee producers like Vietnam and Indonesia could be hit, resulting in soaring prices.

    “The now widely-expected transition to El Nino conditions in Q323 has stoked fears of reduced output in Vietnam and Indonesia, both major coffee robusta producers,” Fitch Solutions’ research unit BMI said in report dated May 24.

    Robusta beans are known for their bitter characteristics and higher acidity, containing more caffeine than their premium and pricier arabica counterpart.

    Brazil’s robusta crop has also been negatively impacted by drought as well, the report said.

    That means the cost of instant coffee and espressos, which are often made with robusta beans, could come under pressure amid supply worries and a stronger than usual demand for robusta as consumers turn to cheaper substitutes for arabica.

    El Nino is a weather phenomenon that typically brings hotter and drier than usual conditions to the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean. Climate scientists are predicting that this year’s El Nino could descend in the second half of 2023

    Southeast Asia recently saw record-breaking heat in the middle of May.

    Asia, generally speaking, has taken a liking to Robusta more so than Arabica, and as such the demand for Robusta is growing at a much faster rate

    Shawn Hackett

    President of Hackett Financial Advisors

    “Across Southeast Asia, El Niño conditions are associated with below-average rainfall and higher temperatures, both of which depress coffee production,” the BMI report said.

    Vietnam, Indonesia and Brazil are the largest producers of robusta, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization.

    “We draw attention to heavy rains in Indonesia through Q123, which have had a negative impact on coffee bean quality, with the USDA forecasting a decline of about one fifth in coffee robusta production,” the analysts said.

    Carlos Mera, head of agri commodities markets at Rabobank, is forecasting a 10% drop in production to 11.2 million bags of robusta in the coming crop harvest.

    A man holding Robusta coffee beans at a coffee tasting fair in Buon Ma Thuot city in Daklak province, Vietnam. Bitter and earthy. fit for instant brews only.

    Nhac Nguyen | Afp | Getty Images

    In 2016, El Nino-related water shortages in both Vietnam and Indonesia led to a global production decline of close to 10%, according to the research unit’s statistics.

    Typically, in an El Nino year, it is “not uncommon” for Vietnam and Indonesia to “see a 20% decline in production” in robusta beans, Shawn Hackett, president of commodity brokerage firm Hackett Financial Advisors, told CNBC.

    “That would mean a pretty severe contraction of robusta,” he said.

    Rising demand for the robusta

    Robusta beans account for 40% of the world’s coffee production, and arabica beans make up the remaining 60% of global coffee production. Arabica beans are usually deemed to be of higher quality and command higher prices than robusta coffee.

    However, global economic pressures are tipping demand toward robusta, the underdog of coffee beans.

    Robusta prices are supported as coffee-product manufacturers and consumers substitute robusta beans for pricier arabica beans to save costs during inflationary times, the BMI report said.

    Robusta coffee prices recently soared to a 15-year high of $2,783 per ton toward the end of May. They last traded at $2,608 per ton for July futures, according to data from the Intercontinental Exchange.

    Additionally, the premium that arabica beans have over robusta beans plunged to the lowest since 2019 due to soaring demand for the relatively cheaper coffee bean.

    “Asia, generally speaking, has taken a liking to robusta more so than arabica, and as such the demand for robusta is growing at a much faster rate than demand for arabica,” said Hackett.

    He cited the lower price point of robusta beans in Asia and the population’s palette for robusta-bean based drinks. 

    Kopi, also known as Nanyang coffee, is a dark coffee beverage popular in Southeast Asia that’s traditionally brewed using robusta beans.

    A farmer harvesting coffee cherries at a coffee plantation in Central Java, Indonesia, on May 25, 2023.

    Dimas Ardian | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    But Asia is not the only region that has taken an increased liking to robusta.

    “While the reduction in washed arabica imports is partially due to lower availability … the shift to robusta shows that cheaper coffees are being heavily preferred by the European market,” said Natalia Gandolphi, analyst at HedgePoint Global Markets’ Intelligence.

    Gandolphi said she expects a deficit of 4.16 million bags of robusta for the October 2023 to September 2024 period.

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  • Oil prices jump more than 2% after Saudi Arabia sets July production cut

    Oil prices jump more than 2% after Saudi Arabia sets July production cut

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    Oil futures opened sharply higher Sunday evening, after Saudi Arabia agreed to deliver an additional 1 million–barrel daily production cut next month as the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies moved to extend existing production targets.

    Price action

    • West Texas Intermediate crude for July delivery
      CL00,
      +0.98%

      CL.1,
      +0.98%

      CLN23,
      +0.98%

      remained up $1.49, or 2.1%, at $73.23 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after trading as high as $75.06.

    • August Brent crude
      BRN00,
      +0.87%

      BRNQ23,
      +0.87%
      ,
      the global benchmark, gained $1.59, or 2.1%, to trade at $77.72 a barrel on ICE Futures Europe, after touching $78.73 after the open.

    Market drivers

    Saudi Arabia on Sunday said it would cut oil output by 1 million barrels a day in July, and that the reduction could be extended if needed. The announcement came as OPEC+ agreed to extend current production levels through the end of 2024 at a contentious meeting in Vienna.

    See: Saudis to cut oil production by 1 million barrels a day in July as OPEC+ extends output deal

    OPEC+ agreed last October to cut production by 2 million barrels a day. Some OPEC+ members in early April announced further cuts totaling 1.6 million barrels a day through year-end, including 500,000 barrels a day in reductions by Saudi Arabia.

    Saudi Energy Minister Abdulaziz bin Salman last month warned that short sellers should “watch out” and that they would be “ouching” much as they did in early April, when the surprise cuts caused a sharp, but short-lived, spike in crude prices.

    The outcome of the meeting reinforces Saudi Arabia’s “uneasiness with the level of short positions in the market rather than signaling concerns around demand outlook,” said Giacomo Romeo, energy equity analyst at Jefferies, in a Sunday evening note to clients.

    “The open-ended part of the measure was likely put in place to discourage future short positioning,” he wrote.

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  • Goldman Sachs and others expect copper prices to soar. Here are some related stocks that analysts love

    Goldman Sachs and others expect copper prices to soar. Here are some related stocks that analysts love

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  • Asia stocks hit by slide in China factory activity, jitters over U.S. debt-ceiling vote

    Asia stocks hit by slide in China factory activity, jitters over U.S. debt-ceiling vote

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    BEIJING (AP) — Asian stock markets sank Wednesday ahead of a vote by Congress on a deal to avert a government debt default, while a downturn in Chinese factory activity deepened, adding to signs global economic activity is weakening.

    Shanghai, Tokyo, Hong Kong and Sydney retreated. Oil prices declined.Wall Street’s benchmark S&P 500 index edged up less than 0.1% on Tuesday as President Joe Biden and U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy tried to line up votes in support of their deal to allow the government to borrow more. Without…

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