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Tag: Consumer confidence

  • Survey finds retailer optimism, though rising costs remain a concern | Long Island Business News

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    THE BLUEPRINT:

    • 68% of store managers expect better performance in 2026

    • , , and were cited as the biggest challenges

    • AI, automation, and in-store technology are top priorities for improving efficiency and execution

    • Strong customer service remains the leading advantage for brick-and-mortar retailers over e-commerce

     

    While store managers are heading into 2026 with optimism for better performance, most say rising costs are expected to impact business this year. 

    That’s according to the 15th annual Sentiment Survey released by Plainfield, N.J.-based  Corporation (LMC). Levin manages 125 properties totaling 16 million square feet across the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic regions, including the 221,612-square-foot Mayfair Shopping Center on 24 acres in Commack. 

    The survey found that most respondents (68.6%) said their stores will perform much better or somewhat better. However, they indicated that the economy and consumer confidence (71.3%) and inflation and rising costs (69.4%) were the top factors expected to impact business in 2026, followed by labor availability and labor costs (36.1%), according to a LMC statement. 

    “2026 is shaping up as a year where execution will matter more than ever,” Matthew Harding, Levin CEO, said in the statement. “With consumers focused on value, retailers are doubling down on fundamentals — strong service, tight inventory discipline and technology that improves efficiency in the store.” 

    Shifting priorities at the store level, including AI and automation, were mentioned by 40.9% as the top controllable levers to improve efficiency and day-to-day execution. And with growing competition from online retailers, 39.8% cited in-person customer service and support ranked as the top brick-and-mortar advantage. 

    “Our survey shows technology has quickly become the most common adaptation retailers are prioritizing, from AI and automation to payments and other tools that help teams work faster and serve customers better,” Melissa Sievwright, LMC’s vice president of marketing and corporate communications, said in the statement. “Retailers are looking for practical technology that strengthens day-to-day execution and supports customer service at the store level.” 

    While 24.1% reported no price increases in response to inflation in 2025, 38.8% said prices rose under 10%. Looking ahead, 35.5% said they anticipate raising prices further in 2026, while 44.9% said they’re not sure. 

    The Levin survey collected input from and restaurant store managers and operators across its managed retail properties, assessing sales and traffic performance, expectations for 2026, pricing actions, hiring and growth plans, operational adaptations, and perceived advantages of . 


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    David Winzelberg

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  • Fact-checking Trump’s economic speech in Detroit

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    President Donald Trump traveled to Michigan on Jan. 13 to address the Detroit Economic Club.

    Earlier in the day, the federal government announced that inflation — a major preoccupation for voters, and one of Trump’s key 2024 campaign issues — held steady at a 2.7% year-over-year rate. That’s slightly lower than the 2.9% in December 2024, the last full month under President Joe Biden, or the 3% in January 2025, a month shared by both presidents.

    But consumer sentiment has fallen on Trump’s watch, showing people feel increasingly negative about their economic position. The University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment index has fallen from 71.7 in January 2025 to 51 in November 2025. That’s just slightly above its lowest level ever, in June 2022, when year-over-year inflation peaked at about 9%.

    The nation is still adding jobs, but at a slower pace than usual. Counting December’s preliminary numbers, the economy added 584,000 jobs in 2025, the lowest annual figure since 2003, not counting recession years.

    Trump’s long-running confrontation with Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell reached a new high, as Powell announced Jan. 11 that he was under Justice Department criminal investigation related to testimony about a Federal Reserve building renovation. Trump has been saying for the past year that he wants to see Powell gone because he has not lowered interest rates enough.

    This morning, before leaving Washington, D.C., for Michigan, Trump told reporters, “Well, he’s billions of dollars over budget. So, he either is incompetent, or he is crooked. I don’t know what he is, but he certainly doesn’t do a very good job.”

    Read PolitiFact’s fact-checks of his statements below.

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  • RBI: Consumers expect higher rise in overall spending over the next one-year, reveals survey

    RBI: Consumers expect higher rise in overall spending over the next one-year, reveals survey

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    Consumer confidence paused on its uptrend as sentiments on all parameters, except spending, recorded some moderations in the latest bi-monthly consumer confidence survey released by the Reserve Bank of India. For the year ahead, consumer confidence remained at elevated level in the optimistic terrain though it declined, albeit marginally, due to relatively tempered sentiments on the general economic situation and employment prospects.

    Consumers expect higher rise in overall spending over the next one-year vis-à-vis the previous survey round; more respondents expect an increase in both essential and non-essential spending, the survey revealed.

    The bi-monthly inflation expectations survey of households for the three-month and one year ahead periods increased by 20 basis points (bps) and 10 bps, respectively, but remained in single digits. Their perception on current inflation, however, moderated by 10 bps and stood at 8.0 per cent in the latest survey round. A higher share of respondents expected prices and inflation to rise for all major product groups over the next three months as well as one-year periods. Among occupation categories, self-employed respondents group expected highest inflation. At the aggregate level, female respondents had marginally lower inflation assessment and expectations than their male counterparts.

    The survey of professional forecasters showed that real gross domestic product (GDP) is expected to grow by 6.8 per cent in 2024-25, revised up by 10 basis points (bps) from the previous round. It is expected to grow by 6.7 per cent in 2025-26, revised up by 20 bps from March 2024 survey round. The panellists placed GDP growth forecasts in the range of 6.4-8.1 per cent for 2024-25 and in the range of 6.0-7.7 per cent for 2025-26.

    Annual growth in real private final consumption expenditure (PFCE) and real gross fixed capital formation (GFCF) for 2024-25 are expected at 6.0 per cent and 8.6 per cent, respectively. Real gross value added (GVA) growth projection has been revised up marginally to 6.6 per cent for 2024-25 and kept unchanged at 6.4 per cent for 2025-26.

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  • Closing This Gap May Be Biden’s Key to a Second Term

    Closing This Gap May Be Biden’s Key to a Second Term

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    Just since last November, the most closely watched measure of consumer confidence about the economy has soared by about 25 percent. That’s among the most rapid improvements recorded in years for the University of Michigan’s Index of Consumer Sentiment, even after a slight decline in the latest figures released yesterday.

    And yet, even as consumer confidence has rebounded since last fall, President Joe Biden’s approval rating has remained virtually unchanged—and negative. Now, as then, a solid 55 percent majority of Americans say they disapprove of his performance as president in the index maintained by FiveThirtyEight, while only about 40 percent approve.

    That divergence between improving attitudes about the economy and stubbornly negative assessments of the president’s performance is compounding the unease of Democratic strategists as they contemplate the impending rematch between Biden and former President Donald Trump. Most Democratic strategists I spoke with believe that brightening views about the economy could still benefit Biden. But many also acknowledge that each month that passes without improvement for Biden raises more questions about whether even growing economic optimism will overcome voters’ doubts about him on other fronts.

    Doug Sosnik, the chief White House political adviser to Bill Clinton during his 1996 reelection, told me that if he was in the White House again today, “I would say I’m not that concerned” about improving economic attitudes not lifting Biden yet, “because this takes time.” But, Sosnik added, “if you come back to me in six weeks or two months and we haven’t seen any movement, then I’d start becoming very concerned.”

    Historically, measures of consumer confidence have been a revealing gauge of an incumbent president’s reelection chances. Presidents Ronald Reagan, Clinton, and Barack Obama, as I’ve written, all saw their job-approval ratings tumble when consumer confidence fell early in their first terms amid widespread unease over the economy. But when the economy revived and consumer confidence improved later in their term, each man’s approval rating rose with it. Riding the wave of those improving attitudes, all three won their reelection campaigns, Reagan in a historic 49-state landslide.

    By contrast, when Presidents Jimmy Carter and George H. W. Bush lost their reelection bids, declining or stagnant consumer confidence was an early augur of their eventual defeat. Collapsing consumer confidence amid the coronavirus pandemic in 2020 also foreshadowed Trump’s defeat, after sustained optimism about the economy had been one of his greatest political strengths during his first three years.

    Polling leaves little doubt that since last fall, more Americans are starting to feel better about the economy. An index of economic attitudes compiled by the Gallup Organization recently reached its highest level since September 2021. Even after the small retreat in the latest numbers, the University of Michigan’s index is now at its highest level since the summer of 2021. A separate consumer-confidence survey conducted by the Conference Board, a business group, also slipped slightly in February but remains higher than its level last fall.

    None of this, though, has yet generated any discernible improvement in Biden’s standing with the public. In fact, the recent Gallup Poll that documented the rise in economic optimism since last October found that Biden’s approval rating over the same period had fallen, from 41 to 38 percent—a single percentage point above the lowest mark Gallup has ever measured for him. The fact that consumer confidence has revived without elevating Biden’s ratings suggests “that impressions of his economic handling have been set and will likely be hard to change as he faces other struggles with perceptions of age and capacity,” the Republican pollster Micah Roberts told me.

    Paul Kellstedt, a political scientist at Texas A&M University, told me that two big structural shifts in public opinion help explain why Biden has not benefited more so far from these green shoots of optimism.

    One, Kellstedt said, is that the relationship is weakening between objective economic trends and consumer confidence. Compared with the days of Reagan or Clinton, more voters in both parties are reluctant to describe even a booming economy in positive terms when the other party holds the White House, Kellstedt noted. Given Biden’s record of overall economic growth and job creation, as well as the dramatic rise in the stock market, the consumer-confidence numbers, though improving, are still lower “than they should be based on objective fundamentals,” he told me.

    Still, optimism about the economy has increased since last fall, not only among Democrats but also among independents and even Republicans, trends that have lifted previous presidents. That points to what Kellstedt calls the second structural challenge facing Biden: The relationship between voters’ attitudes about the economy and their judgments about the president is also weakening.

    Amid these new patterns in public opinion, “a strengthening economy is not going to hurt Biden, of course, but how much it is going to help him is quite uncertain,” Kellstedt told me.

    Political strategists in both parties believe another central reason Biden isn’t benefiting more from the many positive economic trends under his presidency is that so many Americans remain scarred by the biggest exception: the highest inflation in four decades. Although costs aren’t rising nearly as fast as they were earlier in Biden’s presidency, for many essentials, such as food and rent, prices remain much higher than when he took office.

    Jay Campbell, a Democratic pollster who also surveys economic attitudes for CNBC, told me that more than anything else, “what is holding back” Biden from rising is that “it is still well within your memory when you were spending at the grocery store 10 to 20 percent less than you are now.”

    Republicans see a related factor constraining Biden’s potential gains: The baseline that voters are comparing him against is not in the distant past, but what they remember from the Trump presidency before the pandemic. Even though the University of Michigan’s consumer-confidence index and Gallup’s Economic Confidence Index have improved substantially since last year, for instance, in absolute terms they still stand well below their levels during Trump’s first three years. “There’s an alternative economic approach that voters can remember and compare to the years under Bidenomics,” Roberts told me. Jim McLaughlin, a pollster for Trump’s 2024 campaign, told me voters don’t credit Biden for moderating inflation largely because they blame him for causing it in the first place.

    A silver lining in all this for Biden is that, as Kellstedt noted, voters’ judgments about which candidate can better manage the economy don’t determine their preferences in the presidential race as much as they once did. Today, as I’ve written over the years, the two political coalitions are held together more by shared cultural values than by common economic interests.

    As recently as the 2022 election, Democratic House candidates not only carried the small share of voters who described the economy as good, but also won more than three-fifths of the much larger group who called it only fair, according to exit polls. That was primarily because a historically large number of voters down on the economy, and Biden’s performance, nonetheless rejected Republican candidates whom they viewed as a threat to their rights (particularly on abortion), their values, and democracy itself. That same dynamic will undoubtedly help Biden in 2024, particularly among upper-middle-class voters who have felt less strain over inflation, are most likely to be benefiting from the stock market’s surge, and are the most receptive to Democratic charges that Trump will threaten democracy and their personal freedoms.

    But Biden also has plenty of his own vulnerabilities on noneconomic issues. Not only Republicans but also independents give him dismal ratings for his handling of immigration and the border. His expansive support of Israel’s war against Hamas has deeply divided the Democratic coalition. And a broad consensus of voters, now often about 80 percent or more in polls, worry that Biden is too old for another term. If attitudes about the economy continue to mend, and Biden’s approval remains mired, “the stories that will be written is that voters have tuned him out, they’ve made their minds up, he’s too old,” Sosnik told me.

    Trump inspires such intense resistance that Biden, in a rematch, is virtually certain to win more support than any modern president from voters who are pessimistic about the economy. But that doesn’t mean Biden can overcome any deficit to Trump on the economy, no matter how large. And that deficit right now is very large: In national polls released last month by both NBC News and Marquette University Law School, voters trusted Trump over Biden for handling the economy by about 20 percentage points.

    At some point, the strategists I spoke with agree, the economic hole could become too deep to climb from by relying on other issues. (Both the NBC and Marquette polls showed Biden running much closer to Trump in the ballot test than on the economy—but still trailing the former president on the ballot test.) To overtake Trump, Biden likely needs twin dynamics to continue. He needs the slight February pullback evident in the University of Michigan and Conference Board surveys to prove a blip, and the share of Americans satisfied with the economy to continue growing. And then he needs more of those satisfied voters to credit him for the improvement.

    Biden has some powerful arguments he can marshal to sell voters on his economic record. Wages have been rising faster than prices since last spring, particularly for low-income workers. The big three economic bills Biden passed in his first two years have triggered an enormous investment boom in new manufacturing plants for clean energy, electric vehicles, and semiconductors, with the benefits flowing disproportionately toward smaller blue-collar communities largely excluded from the tech-heavy information economy. He can also point to significant legislative achievements that are helping families afford prescription-drug and health-care costs—a potentially powerful calling card, especially with seniors. If the Federal Reserve Board cuts interest rates by this summer—which it has signaled it will do if inflation remains moderate—that could turbocharge the improvement in consumer confidence.

    “There is so much other good news that I feel like there’s a case to be made to people that this president has substantially improved the economy,” Campbell told me. “But whether that ultimately supersedes people’s negativity about [inflation] is a question that I don’t have an answer to.”

    Biden still has time to improve his standing on the economy, but that time isn’t unlimited. Sosnik says history has shown that voters solidify their judgments about a president’s performance in the period between the second half of his third year in office and the first half of his fourth year, about four months from now. President John F. Kennedy, speaking about the economy, famously said, “A rising tide lifts all boats.” The next few months will reveal whether Biden’s has run aground too deeply for that still to apply.

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    Ronald Brownstein

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  • China faces serious structural issues, but its stocks offer some trading opportunities: Ron Temple

    China faces serious structural issues, but its stocks offer some trading opportunities: Ron Temple

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    Ron Temple from Lazard explains why he sees China market as a trading opportunity rather than an investment opportunity.

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  • Price Wars Help Spark $157 Billion Rout in China Consumer Stocks

    Price Wars Help Spark $157 Billion Rout in China Consumer Stocks

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    (Bloomberg) — The seemingly relentless decline in prices of Chinese goods amid tepid consumer demand is denting expectations that corporate earnings can revive the flagging stock market.

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    From electric vehicles to fast food, companies are engaging in a battle of promotions aimed at luring customers who are spooked by dim job prospects and have seen a persistent property slump hurt wealth creation. Consumer prices fell for a third-straight month in December, the longest streak since 2009, deepening concerns about companies’ profits and share prices.

    “That’s all symbolic of a very weak consumption environment that includes lack of consumer confidence and weak income growth,” said Xin-Yao Ng, an investment director for Asian equities at abrdn. “We are cautious on 4Q earnings across most sectors, and would assume that continues in 1Q unless the government starts doing something massive to support the economy.”

    Gauges of consumer stocks have been the worst performers on the MSCI China Index since the end of September, after the real estate measure. The aggregate market value of companies included in the two consumer indexes has fallen by about $157 billion since. And the biggest drags on the MSCI benchmark in this span include e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., restaurant operator Yum China Holdings Inc. and EV maker BYD Co. — which have all been offering big discounts.

    The world’s second-largest stock market has started 2024 on a dismal note, with the MSCI China gauge already down more than 4% so far this year. It capped a third straight annual decline in 2023.

    “The bigger picture is that the weak demand is leading to a deflationary environment, which particularly bodes ill for businesses that cannot achieve higher volumes with lower prices,” said Daisy Li, a fund manager at EFG Asset Management HK Ltd.

    READ: China Price Wars Break Out Among Consumer Brands as Growth Slows

    Wider Discounts

    The EV industry has been among the worst hit by intense competition as growth slows, with Chinese makers following the lead of Tesla Inc. in lowering prices to boost sales. BYD and local peers including Xpeng Inc. and Li Auto Inc. have shed billions of dollars in market value in the past few months.

    “Retail prices are falling fast,” Morgan Stanley analysts wrote in their 2024 outlook report for the Chinese EV sector. “While local brands, in general, have fared better than luxury and foreign brands in terms of widening discounts, we expect discounts to further widen into 1Q24 on the back of seasonality effects.”

    READ: Tesla Declines on China Price Cuts and German Plant Shutdown

    Even China’s vaunted internet giants have been impacted, with Alibaba and JD.com Inc. seeing their stock prices tumble as they wage a fierce battle for market share. The price war has made US-listed PDD Holdings Inc., operator of discount site Temu, one of the rare bright spots in China’s e-commerce industry.

    Many economy and market observers are hoping for interest-rate cuts and government spending to help prevent the nation from entering a deflationary spiral.

    Fund managers say the next catalyst they are watching is pricing and sales data around Chinese New Year in February, which will offer more clues on consumer confidence. The next few weeks may also be key for policy action, given Chinese leaders will soon gear up for the National People’s Congress. That annual legislative session, held in March, is where the government is expected to announce its official growth target for 2024.

    READ: China Seen Cutting Rate, Boosting Cash to Support Economy

    ‘No Player Is Immune’

    A Morgan Stanley survey conducted late last month suggests seasonally better consumer sentiment ahead of the holidays. However, “sustainability is in doubt amid slowing economic recovery,” analysts including Lillian Lou wrote in a note.

    Salary cuts and job losses have remained among the top concerns of households, they wrote, adding that the number of consumers anticipating the economy to worsen ticked up by two percentage points from November to 13%.

    In all, there is little hope for a quick fix. Citigroup Inc. expects consensus estimates to fall for Li Ning Co. and Anta Sports Products Ltd. around the upcoming results season, hurt by foreign competition and pushes into lower-tier cities with cheaper products.

    Fast-food companies are still locked in a protracted fight for customers, with some offering full meals for around $3. It’s difficult to make money at such low prices.

    “We expect industry margins to erode until the irrational price war ends,” Kevin Yin, an analyst at JPMorgan Chase & Co., wrote in a note while cutting estimates for Yum China. “No player is immune” to the headwinds created by the nation’s slowing demand growth, he added.

    READ: China’s Deflation Shows Domestic Demand Is Big 2024 Challenge

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  • Stocks Are Dragged Lower by Share Selloff in China: Markets Wrap

    Stocks Are Dragged Lower by Share Selloff in China: Markets Wrap

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    (Bloomberg) — Stocks in Asia were dragged down by losses in Hong Kong and China amid concern over tighter regulation on the gaming industry and fears the Chinese government’s efforts to bolster the economy are insufficient.

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    The Hang Seng Tech Index slid as much as 3.5%, putting it on course for the lowest close since November 2022. The three biggest drags on the MSCI Asia Pacific Index were Tencent Holdings Ltd., Alibaba Group Holdings Ltd. and Meituan, all Chinese tech firms. Benchmark stock indexes also fell in South Korea and Australia.

    Investor sentiment remains quite negative in China despite a rally in global stocks during the past two months of 2023, Nomura Group analysts including Chetan Seth in Singapore wrote in a client note. “In China, there have been more signs of support for the economy, but equity investors still do not appear convinced,” they said.

    European equity futures also edged lower before euro-zone retail sales and consumer confidence data that may give a better guide on the region’s economic recovery.

    US equity futures were little changed after the S&P 500 closed marginally higher Friday after payroll growth beat expectations but the service sector slowed. Japanese financial markets were shut Monday for a holiday.

    The dollar edged higher versus most of its Group-of-10 peers, while the yen strengthened ahead of Tokyo inflation data due Tuesday. Treasury 10-year futures dropped. There’s no trading of cash Treasuries in Asia due to the Japanese holiday.

    Rate-Cut Bets

    Global stocks slid the most since October last week as markets were rattled by a deluge of corporate issuance and the Federal Reserve indicated it was in no rush to cut interest rates.

    Still, markets are pricing in rate cuts by March and traders are now looking to the US inflation print due Thursday for the next major guide for the Fed outlook. The inflation data is expected to see the underlying measure ease further to 3.8% year-on-year in December from 4% in the month prior, according to a Bloomberg survey.

    For some investors, the rate-cut expectations have gone too far.

    “Even if US inflation conveniently falls back to target in H1-2024, it is hard to imagine the FOMC cutting much more aggressively than 150bps if the US economy avoids recession,” Eric Robertsen, global head of research and chief strategist at Standard Chartered Bank, wrote in a note. “The FOMC is unlikely to deliver on these market expectations, and we feel that short-end rate pricing is due for a correction.”

    Elsewhere, Boeing Co. shares will be in focus when Wall Street opens as groundings of the 737 Max 9 aircraft gathered pace globally after a fuselage section on a brand-new Alaska Airlines jet blew out during flight.

    In commodities, oil dropped after Saudi Arabia cut official selling prices for all regions, underscoring a worsening outlook and outweighing concern over Red Sea tensions and supply disruptions in Libya.

    Key events this week:

    • Eurozone economic confidence, retail sales, consumer confidence, Monday

    • Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic speaks, Monday

    • US House returns from recess, Monday

    • Australia retail sales, Tuesday

    • Japan Tokyo CPI, household spending, Tuesday

    • Eurozone unemployment, Tuesday

    • World Economic Forum’s global risks report released, Wednesday

    • US wholesale inventories, Wednesday

    • Deadline for US Securities & Exchange Commission to vote on Bitcoin ETF applications, Wednesday

    • New York Fed President John Williams speaks, Wednesday

    • US CPI, initial jobless claims, Thursday

    • China CPI, PPI, trade, Friday

    • France CPI, Friday

    • UK industrial production, Friday

    • US PPI, Friday

    • Bank of America, Bank of New York Mellon, BlackRock, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo report fourth-quarter results, Friday

    • Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari speaks, Friday

    Stocks

    • S&P 500 futures were little changed as of 6:30 a.m. London time. The S&P 500 rose 0.2% on Friday

    • Nasdaq 100 futures were little changed. The Nasdaq 100 rose 0.1%

    • Euro Stoxx 50 futures fell 0.2%

    • Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index fell 2%

    • China’s Shanghai Composite Index fell 1%

    • Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index fell 0.5%

    Currencies

    • The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed

    • The euro was unchanged at $1.0943

    • The Japanese yen rose 0.3% to 144.20 per dollar

    • The offshore yuan was little changed at 7.1668 per dollar

    • The Australian dollar was little changed at $0.6707

    • The British pound was little changed at $1.2712

    Cryptocurrencies

    • Bitcoin fell 0.2% to $44,164.12

    • Ether fell 0.8% to $2,223.26

    Bonds

    Commodities

    • West Texas Intermediate crude fell 1.5% to $72.72 a barrel

    • Spot gold fell 0.7% to $2,031.54 an ounce

    This story was produced with the assistance of Bloomberg Automation.

    –With assistance from Matthew Burgess.

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    ©2024 Bloomberg L.P.

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  • We like food and beverage stocks in China and 'active stock-picking' is key: Goldman Sachs

    We like food and beverage stocks in China and 'active stock-picking' is key: Goldman Sachs

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    Si Fu of Goldman Sachs discusses investing opportunities in China as consumer demand continues to recover.

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  • CNBC Daily Open: Markets overcame a tough first half

    CNBC Daily Open: Markets overcame a tough first half

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    People walk past a Tesla showroom at a shopping mall in Beijing on May 31, 2023.

    Jade Gao | AFP | Getty Images

    Soft headline, hard core
    The U.S. personal consumption expenditures price index rose just 0.1% in May and 3.8% from a year ago — the lowest year-over-year increase since April 2021. Excluding food and energy prices, the figures are slightly higher. Prices increased 0.3% month over month and 4.6% from a year ago. But the annual number’s still 10 basis points less than economists expected.

    Sublime first half for stocks
    Pop the champagne: On Friday, U.S. stocks ended in the green for the day, week, quarter and first half of the year. Asia-Pacific markets rose Monday on the back of Wall Street’s rally: Japan’s Nikkei 225 popped 1.67%, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index jumped 1.73% and South Korea’s Kospi climbed 1.5%. That’s despite mixed data for the region’s factory activity in June.

    Tesla zooms ahead
    Tesla produced 479,700 vehicles and delivered 466,140 vehicles during the second quarter. The delivery figures are an 83% year-over-year increase that beat Wall Street’s expectations. As Elon Musk’s vehicle company doesn’t report sales figures, delivery numbers offer investors an idea of how many cars the company has been selling.

    Movements around China
    U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen will travel to Beijing this week to meet with senior Chinese officials. But the Biden administration doesn’t expect significant breakthroughs during the trip, a senior official said. Separately, the People’s Bank of China appointed Pan Gongsheng, head of the country’s foreign exchange regulator, as its new party secretary — a role that typically has the most sway in China’s institutions.

    [PRO] Broadening rally?
    The stock market’s astounding rebound in the first half of the year was mostly driven by seven Big Tech stocks — collectively, they accounted for 80% of the gains in the S&P 500, according to UBS. But analysts are optimistic the rally could broaden in the third quarter, especially since a recession may be further off than everyone had expected.

    The bottom line

    Friday marked the end of the first half of the year and, boy, what a six months it’s been.

    The Nasdaq Composite‘s surged 31.7% since the start of 2023, its best first half since 1983. To be sure, part of this is because of the base effect: The Nasdaq was 33.1% down last year. Compared with that dismal showing, any gain would appear monumental.

    Yet let’s not discount the Nasdaq’s incredible rally. This year has, in some ways, been a steeper hill to climb for stocks than the last.

    Sure, inflation’s been edging down. May’s PCE price index showed all the right numbers moving in the right direction (albeit at a slower pace than everyone had hoped for).

    But interest rates are the highest they’ve been in 16 years — and have shot up to those levels in a mere 10 months. Those rates have already broken three regional banks back in March, and one in May. Nonetheless, technology stocks — typically the most sensitive to the cost of borrowing — are still going strong. Indeed, Apple’s market capitalization closed above $3 trillion, making it the first publicly traded company ever to do so. That resilience of stocks, surely, is something to celebrate.

    The S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average didn’t do too shabbily either. The S&P popped 15.9% for its best first half since 2019, while the Dow climbed 3.8%.

    And the good news doesn’t stop there. Inflation expectations for a year from now dropped to 3.3%, the lowest level since March 2021. Meanwhile, consumer confidence increased more than expected, according to the University of Michigan sentiment survey.

    Much depends on June’s jobs report, out Friday. If it shows the labor market loosening just enough to not add to inflationary pressures, but still tight enough that unemployment won’t drastically increase, then we’ll have a start to the second half of the year as good as the way we ended the first.

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  • CNBC Daily Open: Markets triumphed over a tough first half

    CNBC Daily Open: Markets triumphed over a tough first half

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    Products at the showroom of the Nvidia Corp. offices in Taipei, Taiwan, on Friday, June 2, 2023.

    I-Hwa Cheng | Bloomberg | 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

    Soft headline, hard core
    The U.S. personal consumption expenditures price index
    rose just 0.1% in May and 3.8% from a year ago — the lowest year-over-year increase since April 2021. Excluding food and energy prices, the figures are slightly higher. Prices increased 0.3% month over month and 4.6% from a year ago. But the annual number’s still 10 basis points less than economists expected.

    Sublime first half for stocks
    Pop the champagne: On Friday, U.S. stocks ended in the green for the day, week, quarter and first half of the year. The pan-European Stoxx 600 index added 1.16% to notch an 8.8% gain for strong first-half gains too, amid a lower-than-expected inflation reading for the euro zone. Preliminary data showed headline prices in June rose 5.5% year on year, down from 6.1% in May.

    Tesla zooms ahead
    Tesla produced 479,700 vehicles and delivered 466,140 vehicles during the second quarter. The delivery figures are an 83% year-over-year increase that beat Wall Street’s expectations. About 96% of the vehicles delivered were the Model Y and Model 3. As Elon Musk’s vehicle company doesn’t report sales figures, delivery numbers offer investors an idea of how many cars the company has been selling.

    Goldman’s not-so-golden Apple
    Goldman Sachs is talking to American Express to offload its Apple credit card and high-yield savings account, a source told CNBC’s Leslie Picker. Just last October, Goldman CEO David Solomon announced that Goldman and Apple have renewed their partnership through 2029. That’s an abrupt reversal of the partnership, and perhaps a sign that Goldman is looking to pull out of the consumer banking sector.

    [PRO] Broadening rally?
    The stock market’s astounding rebound in the first half of the year was mostly driven by seven Big Tech stocks — collectively, they accounted for 80% of the gains in the S&P 500, according to UBS. But analysts are optimistic the rally could broaden in the third quarter, especially since a recession may be further off than everyone had expected.

    The bottom line

    Friday marked the end of the first half of the year and, boy, what a six months it’s been.

    The Nasdaq Composite‘s surged 31.7% since the start of 2023, its best first half since 1983. To be sure, part of this is because of the base effect: The Nasdaq was 33.1% down last year. Compared with that dismal showing, any gain would appear monumental.

    Yet let’s not discount the Nasdaq’s incredible rally. This year has, in some ways, been a steeper hill to climb for stocks than the last.

    Sure, inflation’s been edging down. May’s PCE price index showed all the right numbers moving in the right direction (albeit at a slower pace than everyone had hoped for).

    But interest rates are the highest they’ve been in 16 years — and have shot up to those levels in a mere 10 months. Those rates have already broken three regional banks back in March, and one in May. Nonetheless, technology stocks — typically the most sensitive to the cost of borrowing — are still going strong. Indeed, Apple’s market capitalization closed above $3 trillion, making it the first publicly traded company ever to do so. That resilience of stocks, surely, is something to celebrate.

    The S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average didn’t do too shabbily either. The S&P popped 15.9% for its best first half since 2019, while the Dow climbed 3.8%.

    And the good news doesn’t stop there. Inflation expectations for a year from now dropped to 3.3%, the lowest level since March 2021. Meanwhile, consumer confidence increased more than expected, according to the University of Michigan sentiment survey.

    Much depends on June’s jobs report, out Friday. If it shows the labor market loosening just enough to not add to inflationary pressures, but still tight enough that unemployment won’t drastically increase, then we’ll have a start to the second half of the year as good as the way we ended the first.

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  • Why Customer Confidence Always Comes First | Entrepreneur

    Why Customer Confidence Always Comes First | Entrepreneur

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    Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

    If you’re in the professional services industry, take a step back and watch what’s happening in the banking industry right now. As of this writing in late March 2023, two banks have failed in the US, and the FDIC stepped in to support the depositors, making them whole. This means the money was not lost per se but rather inconvenienced momentarily.

    However, in the week following, over 120 billion dollars flowed back into the nation’s top 25 biggest banks.

    This should scream to you that consumer confidence is the most important aspect of the client relationship. Period.

    Using banking as an example, customers are always on the lookout for the best deals. They want the lowest interest rates on loans, the highest interest rates on savings and the best customer service. This is why many customers opt for local and regional banks. These institutions often offer better rates and more personalized service than larger banks.

    Related: Analysts Remain Bullish On These 3 Regional Banks

    However, when the economy takes a turn for the worse, and a couple of small banks fail, it can quickly shake customers’ confidence. Suddenly, the safety and security of their funds become the priority, and they run back to the big banks they once avoided and likely still loathe.

    Need more examples? If you’re hiring a CPA for your company’s tax return, what’s more important: customer service and friendliness or your tax bill? Would you feel okay paying more in tax if they responded to your emails and were friendly? Probably not.

    How about this — if you were wrongly accused of a crime and needed to hire a defense attorney, which is more important? Hourly fees, customer service or the ability to get you out of jail. See what I’m saying now?

    The worst part of all this is that the overwhelming majority of local or regional banks are probably doing just fine. All it took to move all those billions of dollars back to the big banks was the mere thought of a small chance of failure (even though it’s still FDIC insured). The slightest sliver of doubt sent them running back to the perceived safety (and horrible service and rates) of big banks without even giving the local guys a chance to defend themselves.

    Related: Banks or VCs; Where Should Startups Seek Funds?

    In banking, law and all professional services, confidence must come first, followed by customer service. Clients are willing to overlook customer service issues if they have confidence in the provider’s ability to deliver results. This is not to say that customer service is not important. It is crucial in building and maintaining client relationships. However, it is not the primary driver of the client’s decision-making process. I always say, “People work with people they like,” but I should add that they only work with people they know can get the job done, then they pick the one they like most.

    So, how can professional service providers build and maintain client confidence? There are a few key strategies that can be employed:

    1. Build a strong reputation. Reputation is everything in the professional services industry. A provider’s reputation is built on their track record of delivering results, expertise and ability to meet client needs.

    Saved a client some money on their taxes? — make sure you tell everyone you know.

    Win a big case? — tell everyone you know! Spread the word!

    2. Communicate often. This transparency can help build trust and confidence in the provider’s ability to deliver results. Taking a personalized approach and communicating frequently can show clients that they are important and that their needs are being met.

    3. Embrace technology. Like it or not, technology is changing how professional services are delivered. By embracing technology, you stay current in the world. This also instills confidence that you’re able to keep up in the changing world and are at the forefront of your industry. That CPA that “doesn’t do email” probably isn’t as up-to-date on recent tax law changes either.

    Remember to be the person they trust; then be the person they like.

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    Scott Ford

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  • Retailers Should Expect A ‘Ho-Ho-Hum’ Holiday 2022

    Retailers Should Expect A ‘Ho-Ho-Hum’ Holiday 2022

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    The National Retail Federation just released its Holiday 2022 forecast predicting that November and December retail sales will advance between 6% to 8%. This comes on the heels of a 13.5% increase last year. Its forecast excludes automobile dealers, gasoline stations and restaurants.

    Recognizing that last year broke all historical records, NRF president and CEO Matthew Shay called out the average 4.9% increase seen over the past decade to declare, “Consumers remain resilient and continue to engage in commerce.”

    NRF chief economist Jack Kleinhenz added:

    “NRF’s holiday forecast takes a number of factors into consideration, but the overall outlook is generally positive as consumer fundamentals continue to support economic activity. Despite record levels of inflation, rising interest rates and low levels of confidence, consumers have been steadfast in their spending and remain in the driver’s seat.”

    I’m no economist, but I can add and subtract. If inflation is running at an annual rate of about 8%, that effectively balances out any gains NRF is forecasting. And if retail can just hold onto the 13.5% increase it realized last year, that would be a win.

    As the nation’s leading retail trade association, it needs to put the most positive spin possible on its forecast. We can’t fault the NRF for that.

    But it’s convenient how it used the decade’s average 4.9% holiday growth to compare this year’s forecast favorably. Inflation wasn’t a factor over that period when it most certainly is this year.

    Net/Net: retailers are in a precarious position looking at the last two months of the year. If they haven’t done their numbers so far this year and kept ahead of inflation, it is doubtful that the next two months will make up for the shortfall.

    NRF’s Glass-Half Full View

    In a nearly hourlong press briefing, Shay and Kleinhenz took reporters through the forecast’s underlying assumptions, with Kleinheiz qualifying the presentation, “This holiday season is anything but typical.”

    Full disclosure: I wasn’t invited to the briefing, but listened to the recording.

    Spending Stratified By Income

    At the household level, its survey shows consumers will spend $832 on average for gifts, decorations, food and other holiday-related purchases, which is in line with the average over the past ten years. But factoring in inflation, that could represent nearly a $70 decline in holiday-related spending.

    The NRF also expects higher-income households to make up for losses by middle and lower-income households, with Shay noting higher-income households will spend “significantly more” on discretionary holiday-related purchases.

    By contrast, lower-income households are “feeling more pressure when it comes to inflation as they’ve had to use more of their monthly income to meet expenses associated with housing, rent, energy and food costs. They are focusing on necessities.”

    Noting that “behavior and spending at higher levels continue to be robust,” Shay remained optimistic.

    “Consumers and households at slightly lower levels, even in the face of the challenges, remain durable and resilient…quite impressive,” he said.

    Break The Piggy Bank Or Charge It?

    When the household budget can’t stretch for holiday extravagancies, Shay said consumers will “supplement spending with savings and credit to provide a cushion and result in a positive holiday season.”

    That is, if their savings are still there. The Bureau of Economic Analysis shows that the personal savings rate as a percent of disposable income dropped by more than half from last November and December, when it was over 7%. It stands at 3.1% in September, the most recent NIPA Table 2.6 reports.

    And putting holiday purchases on credit is no cushion at all. Consumer debt has reached record highs, according to the most recent Federal Research Consumer Credit report.

    Further, credit card debt is now level with pre-pandemic December 2019. Balances are up 9% from this January and 23% higher than at its pandemic low in April 2021, according to the Wall Street Journal.

    Which Inflation?

    On the question of inflation, economist Kleinhenz pooh-poohed the Consumer Price Index (CPI) out of the Bureau of Labor Statistics in favor of the personal consumption expenditures price index (PCE) from the Bureau of Economic Analysis.

    “Everybody’s talking about inflation. It’s not a simple thing to talk about or measure,” he said. “We already noted the CPI was above 8%, but the Feds’ preferred measure is the personal consumption price index. I like that index because you [can] take out foods, motor vehicles, and gasoline and [we find] retail price [increases] for the most part have been between 4% to 5%.”

    Economists and the intelligencia may read the PCE, but most Americans haven’t gotten the memo.

    They hear about the CPI in the news, not the PCE. A quick Google
    GOOG
    News search found some 700k hits on “CPI inflation 2022” compared with just over 51k swapping in PCE. And consumers can’t conveniently breakout their spending by category, but have to pay it all when it comes due.

    Even when pressed by MarketWatch reporter Bill Peters about the effect of higher prices on retail sales, Kleinhenz doubled down on the PCE.

    “A portion of our increase is going to come from higher prices, but not the strangling price raises that are occurring in motor vehicles, gasoline and energy as we go forward this holiday season.”

    The problem is consumers are going to have to pay for other necessities that have incurred the greatest price increases, leaving less money to go to retailers.

    Consumer Confidence Is Eroding

    While people can argue about which inflation index is better – the CPI or PCE – the only opinion that matters is the consumers. For that, we have to look at other indices entirely, like the Consumer Confidence Index.

    “Consumer confidence retreated in October, after advancing in August and September,” said Lynn Franco, Senior Director of Economic Indicators at The Conference Board. “Consumers’ expectations regarding the short-term outlook remained dismal.”

    Like a drop in barometric pressure signals a storm is brewing, the Expectations Index is reading below 80, “ a level associated with recession — suggesting recession risks appear to be rising,” she reported and continued:

    “Notably, concerns about inflation—which had been receding since July—picked up again, with both gas and food prices serving as main drivers. Looking ahead, inflationary pressures will continue to pose strong headwinds to consumer confidence and spending, which could result in a challenging holiday season for retailers.

    “And, given inventories are already in place, if demand falls short, it may result in steep discounting which would reduce retailers’ profit margins.”

    On one measure, we all can agree. “We know consumers continue to be emotionally invested in the holidays,” Shay said.

    But how that emotional investment will express itself in retail over the next two months is up for debate.

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    Pamela N. Danziger, Senior Contributor

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  • 3 Easy Ways to Gain Confidence

    3 Easy Ways to Gain Confidence

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    Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

    As rises, financial confidence declines. According to a recent New York Life survey, 62% of Americans are financially confident, down from 69% in January. Given the current period of high inflation, Americans are faced with more financial uncertainty than ever before. But how can we combat this?

    “Instead of worrying about what you cannot control, shift your energy to what you can create.” – Roy T Bennett.

    This quote is easier to read than follow! However, in the spirit of regaining power in an economic market that can leave us feeling powerless, here are three great steps that can orient us toward a greater sense of personal and financial confidence:

    1. Make efficient decisions
    2. Follow through with a realistic plan
    3. Have the willpower to take control

    As an investor, you cannot control the stock market or the rising gas prices. But you are in the driver’s seat with your self-awareness, self-assurance and self-determination. Confidence is about acceptance and belief in your strengths, skills and abilities. It is not innate; it can be grown and refined over time.

    Here are three guiding attributes that are foundational to confidence. Building insight into these concepts can empower you to strive for financial freedom and help you thrive in all aspects of your life.

    1. Self-awareness

    Personal

    Setbacks and obstacles are why we stop in our tracks, as we often focus on the negative outcomes which stunt us. To feel growth, we need to see and believe in our abilities to succeed and progress.

    One technique to help attain self-awareness is journaling. I know journaling feels like such an unrealistic task, but it doesn’t have to be an elaborate process if you don’t want it to be. It can be as simple as reaching for your phone to take notes when you see, hear or think about something that moves and inspires you. It really can be as easy as taking a screenshot of something that elicits deep emotion for you or jotting down a memory or reflection. The goal is to connect with thoughts and emotions within us that we would typically move on from. When we journal, we give them space to develop. I keep a notes tab on my phone, a physical journal on my nightstand and a photo folder on my phone that has stored quotes, photos or videos that inspire confidence and in me.

    Another technique can be as simple as setting a time every morning, even just one minute, to be reflective and set an intention for yourself for the day. There is no wrong way to start. You have to give yourself the chance to create this growth by taking proactive steps toward building your self-awareness.

    Related: Why It’s Time to Dust Off That Journal

    Financial

    As you gather more information on a topic, you acquire more knowledge. Still, when it comes to Financial Self-Awareness (FSA), it is a little less about financial literacy in general and more about your financial situation. Many people can recite books or the ratios and formulas for excellent investment advice, but if you don’t know what your net worth is today, how can you make decisions about your future?

    Take some time to jot down your past successes and failures with money; this will give you clarity on your “why.” Once you have reviewed and developed a deeper understanding of your financial history, you can move forward with making the necessary decisions to reach your present and future goals. This clarity and intentionality will assist you in building more confidence.

    2. Self-assurance

    Personal

    This level of self-esteem is not built around knowing you are always right; it’s about being able to get up after you fall and still move forward. We all have strengths, so leverage them and ensure you are implementing them daily. We also all have moments of doubt, and we can move forward by harnessing the moments of assurance from revisiting our accomplishments. When was your last moment of success? Think of anything from gathering the courage to have a difficult conversation with someone in your life to finishing a painting, a book or a degree. Accomplishments come in all sizes, so celebrate them and often remind yourself of your successes.

    Financial

    Historically, money has been a taboo subject, especially for women. I grew up thinking it was rude or inappropriate to talk about money. As I got older, I (thankfully) stopped following that rule, which made me look for more information and continue to learn and understand it. Most people don’t talk about it enough, which is one of the reasons why most people have poor money management skills. This then turns into shame and embarrassment, which can keep us from being honest about money and seeking the right help. The more you talk about money, the more comfortable you’ll feel; consistency is essential. Having a financial plan might sound like a hassle at first, but it will save you from multiple headaches in the future. A financial plan gives you a goal that you can track and ultimately increase your economic confidence.

    Related: 12 Ways to Boost Your Confidence in 2022

    3. Self-determination

    Personal

    Determination is usually tied to actions like “I am determined to learn another language, ” which requires steps to accomplish. This is precisely what self-determination is: building a set of skills to reach those goals.

    What skills do you need to build on most? Here are a few to think about: Decision-making, problem-solving, goal-setting and self-advocacy. Psychologists Edward Deci and Richard Ryan developed a theory of motivation that suggested that people tend to be driven by a need to grow and gain fulfillment. Building life skills that escalate your knowledge allows for the independence you seek, and also increased relationships and interactions with others will lead to high self-determination.

    Related: How Resilience Led Me to Success

    Financial

    Take control of your financial journey by allowing yourself flexibility. Confidence is about understanding your strengths and weaknesses, which change over time. It is okay not to be an expert in all things finance; there are experts in the field who outsource help from others. Stay on top of your finances using financial tools like apps and calendar reminders.

    Looking to save more money? Use a budgeting app like Mint and schedule a time to revisit your budget regularly. A visual representation of your goals and progress will help you stay on track and motivated.

    According to a National Bureau of Economic Research study, nearly 80% of women struggle with low self-esteem and shy away from self-advocacy at work. This means four in five women may be held back in their career advancement by a lack of confidence and visibility. Let’s change these statistics and help each other increase our confidence. Remember that applying these steps takes practice. Start with what feels most comfortable and move on to the next. Becoming financially and personally confident will enable you to trust your abilities to manage your wealth and life fruitfully. Once you deepen your self-awareness, self-assurance and self-determination, it will become phenomenally easier to make efficient decisions, follow them with a plan of action and move with conviction. While inflation creates uncertainty for many, your financial confidence need not be wavered by outside factors.

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    Vanessa N. Martinez

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  • Asian stocks follow Wall St higher after UK calms markets

    Asian stocks follow Wall St higher after UK calms markets

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    BEIJING — Asian stock markets followed Wall Street higher Thursday after Britain’s central bank moved forcefully to stop a budding financial crisis.

    Market benchmarks in Hong Kong, Seoul and Sydney added more than 1%. Shanghai and Tokyo also rose. Oil prices edged lower after jumping by more than $3 per barrel the previous day.

    Wall Street’s benchmark S&P 500 index surged 2% on Wednesday for its biggest gain in seven weeks after the Bank of England announced it would buy as many government bonds as needed to restore order to financial markets.

    That helped to calm investor fears that planned British tax cuts would push up already high inflation. That had caused the value of the British pound to fall to its lowest level since the 1970s and bond prices to plunge.

    The Shanghai Composite Index rose 0.8% to 3,068.87 and the Nikkei 225 in Tokyo gained 0.6% to 26,341.76. The Hang Seng in Hong Kong jumped 1.3% to 17,477.97.

    The Kospi in Seoul gained 1.1% to 2,193.82 and Sydney’s S&P ASX 200 rose 1.6% to 6,566.80.

    New Zealand and Southeast Asian markets also advanced.

    On Wall Street, the S&P 500 rose to 3,719.04 after the Bank of England said it would buy bonds over the next two weeks to stop a slide in prices. Investors were rattled by plans for 45 billion pounds ($48 billion) of tax cuts with no spending reductions.

    The central bank earlier warned crumbling confidence in the economy posed a “material risk to U.K. financial stability.” The International Monetary Fund took the rare step of urging a member of the Group of Seven advanced economies to abandon its plan for tax cuts and more borrowing.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average rallied 1.9% to 29,683.74. The Nasdaq composite climbed 2.1% to 11,051.64.

    Despite Wednesday’s gain, the S&P 500 is down more than 20% from its Jan. 3 record, which puts it in what traders call a bear market.

    Forecasters see more turbulence ahead due to worries about a possible recession, higher interest rates and even higher inflation.

    The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury, or the difference between its market price and the payout if held to maturity, briefly exceeded 4% on Wednesday, its highest level in a decade.

    Investor fears are growing that aggressive interest rate hikes this year by the Federal Reserve and central banks in Europe and Asia to cool inflation that is at multi-decade highs might tip the global economy into recession.

    The investment giant Vanguard puts the chance of a U.S. recession at 25% this year and at 65% next year if the Fed follows through on expectations it will raise rates again and keep them elevated through next year.

    In energy markets, benchmark U.S. crude lost 32 cents to $81.83 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract surged $3.65 on Wednesday to $82.15. Brent crude, the price basis for international oils, shed 30 cents to $87.75 per barrel in London. It gained $3.05 the previous session to $89.32.

    The dollar gained to 144.32 yen from Wednesday’s 143.96 yen. The euro declined to 96.82 cents from 97.43 cents.

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