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  • Analysis-US Political Support Tilts Latam Market Risk, Investors Say

    NEW YORK (Reuters) -Latin America’s political map is tilting to the right just as Washington signals deeper support for ideologically aligned governments, a convergence that investors say is starting to reshape how risk is priced across the region’s assets.

    Conservative leaders already govern Argentina, Ecuador and El Salvador, with Bolivia joining the market-friendly column this month. A right-wing bloc came close to winning simple majorities in the Chilean Congress earlier this month, with Jose Antonio Kast tipped to become the country’s first far-right president since the Pinochet dictatorship.

    Conservative candidates are also likely to win presidential elections in Peru and Colombia next year. This leads up to the upcoming departure of leftist Gustavo Petro, who cannot run for reelection in Colombia, and whose outspoken criticism of U.S. policies has made him one of President Donald Trump’s top bogeymen in the region.

    Amid the burst of support for Argentina’s government during the October midterms, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said there was a “generational opportunity” to create allies in Latin America, citing upcoming elections in Chile and later in Colombia.

    While Trump has picked fights with Colombia, Brazil and above all Venezuela, his administration has also cozied up to governments pursuing deregulation, aggressive crime-busting or budget-cutting, showering such allies with financial favors that some fund managers say are now starting to influence sentiment.

    Trump’s actions against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro have triggered massive market interest on bets of a change.

    “We’ve generally seen it as a positive development for risk in the countries which matter to the U.S., and there’s definitely been a pickup in focus around Latin America in particular,” said Grant Webster, co-head of EM FX and sovereign in the EM fixed income team at investment manager Ninety One.

    Latin American financial assets have had a strong 2025 across the board, with some countries’ markets enjoying outsized gains despite tangling with Trump. For example, Brazil’s and Colombia’s currencies are up 15% and 16% against the greenback, respectively. The dollar is down 8% this year against its developed market peers.

    The outperformance has straddled the region, with local currency bonds gaining 15% at the index level, while hard-currency has gained 16%, both outperforming their global peers. Equities in the region have rallied over 40% in dollar terms this year, while their price-to-earnings ratio shows they remain cheap compared to both emerging and developed markets.

    Yet the U.S. approach in the region could work as more of a differentiating variable going forward, with Argentina serving as the poster boy for the new U.S. approach.

    Washington has been an outspoken supporter of Argentine President Javier Milei’s libertarian overhaul, offering up to $20 billion of the country’s balance sheet to stabilize the economy and support the government. Fitch said the involvement spared Argentina, whose reserves had been dwindling in the weeks before the U.S. intervention, another credit rating downgrade.

    That stance has reinforced the perception that ideological alignment may bring financial benefits.

    “It certainly has been for Argentina. It’s been helpful for Venezuelan debt prices,” Webster said. “We take each one as it comes, but on the whole we slightly view other countries in a different light now, because we think the U.S. could have positive influence over them.”

    Venezuelan bonds, although deeply distressed and still trading around 30 cents on the dollar, have returned close to 100% this year, making them the top performers globally in hard currency bond returns according to JPMorgan’s benchmark.

    Chile’s impending realignment has driven one of the region’s strongest equity rallies this year, with the S&P IPSA index up 48%, far outperforming even Mexico and Brazil’s local benchmarks, up close to 30%.

    “With right-leaning parties only one vote away from securing simple majorities in the recent Lower House and Senate elections, we would expect strong Congressional support for growth and investment-enhancing reforms, even if in practical terms they might take time to materialise,” Morgan Stanley analysts wrote this week. Foreign investment in the country could ramp up early next year, they added.

    Conservative candidates’ electoral dominance has supported expectations of regulatory streamlining and tight-fisted budget policies beyond Chile. For investors, the election result there “just confirms the trend, which I would say is market positive,” said Viktor Szabo, portfolio manager at Aberdeen Investments.

    “We do have that move to the right, as we have seen in Argentina, as we’ve seen in Bolivia. And it’s quite important, because we have some really important elections coming up next year, particularly in Colombia and especially in Brazil,” he added. “It’s clear the markets have preference for right-wing governments.”

    Still, Trump’s alliances, which are sometimes fickle, could end up taking a back seat to fiscal health and macroeconomic stability over the longer-term, favoring countries like Peru over Chile and especially Argentina, which is haunted by memories of fiscal crises.

    “We don’t see Washington alignment as a primary pricing variable yet,” said Pramol Dhawan, head of PIMCO’s emerging markets portfolio management team. “Markets favor credible macro policies regardless of political orientation. The real question is policy execution and institutional strength. We price country-specific fundamentals first, geopolitics second.”

    (Reporting by Rodrigo Campos in New York, additional reporting by Karin Strohecker and Libby George in London; Editing by Christian Plumb and Richard Chang)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Reuters

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  • Investors Managing $3 Trillion in Assets Urge Countries to Stop Deforestation

    LONDON (Reuters) -Global investors managing over $3 trillion in assets called on governments on Monday to stop and reverse deforestation and ecosystem degradation by 2030, in a statement signed ahead of a U.N. climate conference in Brazil next month.

    Around 30 institutional investors including Swiss private bank Pictet Group and Nordic investor DNB Asset Management have so far signed up to the Belém Investor Statement on Rainforests, which is open until November 1.

    A report last week found the world is falling far short of the goal of stopping deforestation, with losses of 8.1 million hectares (20 million acres) of forest – an area about the size of England – in 2024 alone, largely driven by agricultural expansion and forest fires.

    “As investors, we are increasingly concerned about the material financial risks that tropical deforestation and nature loss pose to our portfolios,” the statement said.

    The investors emphasised the need for policies that deliver legal, regulatory, and financial certainty to help protect the forests and safeguard economic stability, said Jan Erik Saugestad, CEO at Nordic firm Storebrand Asset Management. 

    “Deforestation undermines the natural systems that global markets rely on – from climate regulation to food and water security.” 

    Earlier this year, the European Union delayed launching its anti-deforestation law by a year after facing opposition from industry and trade partners such as Brazil, Indonesia and the United States, who say complying with the rules would be costly and hurt their exports to Europe.

    The role of climate sceptic U.S. President Donald Trump in rolling back support for global environmental efforts was also hampering action, said Ingrid Tungen, head of deforestation-free markets at Rainforest Foundation Norway. 

    “I think Trump has made it more difficult for investors and managers to take climate and biodiversity into account in such a volatile market,” she said.

    “All the investors that we are talking to think there is a huge risk for us not taking diversification and climate change into consideration in the long-term, and not just for their own morals, but because that will harm the markets directly and their profits directly.”

    (Reporting by Sharon Kimathi; Editing by Nia Williams)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

    Reuters

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  • Canadian Pensions Might Need to Invest More Domestically, Official Says

    TORONTO—Canada’s large public pensions might need to start investing more in Canadian businesses as the country tries to shield its economy from the effects of President Trump’s tariff war, Industry Minister Melanie Joly said.

    Conversations with the pension funds for more domestic investment have already started, Joly said in a telephone interview.

    Copyright ©2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

    Vipal Monga

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  • Crypto Race to Tokenize Stocks Raises Investor Protection Flags

    By Hannah Lang and Elizabeth Howcroft

    NEW YORK/PARIS (Reuters) -A race by crypto companies to sell tokens pegged to stocks is raising alarm bells among traditional financial firms and regulatory experts who warn that the fast-growing novel products pose risks to investors and market stability.

    Buoyed by President Donald Trump’s pro-crypto stance and his administration’s push for friendly regulations, the crypto industry is rushing to capitalize on a global surge in enthusiasm for the sector. 

    Robinhood, Gemini and Kraken among others have launched tokenized stocks in Europe, while Coinbase, Robinhood and startup Dinari are seeking approval to launch similar products in the United States. Nasdaq, meanwhile, last month became the first major exchange to propose offering tokenized shares. 

    The industry says tokenized shares — blockchain-based instruments that track traditional equities — could revolutionize stock markets by allowing shares to be traded 24/7 and settled instantly, boosting liquidity and reducing transaction costs. The combined value of tokenized public stocks geared toward retail investors as of September grew to $412 million, compared with just a few million dollars 12 months ago, according to tokenization tracker RWA.xyz.

    Although many products are marketed like stocks, they rarely offer the same rights, disclosures and protections as traditional equities. Instead, they more closely resemble riskier derivatives, according to a Reuters review of several products and interviews with a dozen industry executives and legal experts. That increases the hazards for investors, while tokenization more broadly could undermine market integrity and fragment liquidity if left unsupervised, critics say.

    “You’re buying exposures to those shares through creating some sort of synthetic instrument,” said Diego Ballon Ossio, a partner at law firm Clifford Chance in London. “A lot of the burden gets shifted on you to understand what exactly it is that you’re buying.”

    A few companies have issued their own experimental stock tokens on the blockchain – software that acts as a shared digital ledger – but most tokenized shares are pegged to public companies and issued by third parties like Ondo Global Markets and Dinari. Some tokens are backed 1:1 by underlying stocks, while others provide economic exposure through derivatives. 

    The industry is divided over which regulations apply to stock tokens, and investor rights and protections vary. Often, the products provide no ownership, voting rights or traditional dividends, while creating counterparty risk exposure to the token issuer. 

    For example, there are multiple tokens pegged to Nvidia and Tesla with a range of structures and terms and conditions.

    “The fact that different tokenized offerings have different rights and different disclosures … that’s a real big worry,” said Gabriel Otte, CEO of Dinari, which offers 1:1 collateralization. 

    Robinhood in June launched trading in tokens pegged to public companies and said it plans to offer tokenized stocks of private companies. To promote the launch, it gave away tokens pegged to OpenAI. Those tokens are derivative contracts backed by Robinhood’s ownership of fund units in a special-purpose vehicle that holds OpenAI convertible notes, according to its terms and conditions. The announcement drew pushback from OpenAI, which said it had not blessed the offering. It also prompted scrutiny from Robinhood’s European regulator.

    Johann Kerbrat, general manager of Robinhood Crypto, said the company clearly flags that its tokens are derivatives.

    “It’s just one step forward to be able to have the benefits of no longer having multiple days to settle,” he added. 

    While Robinhood is issuing public company tokens on the blockchain, it is not yet settling the trades on the blockchain, a spokesperson said.

    Gemini declined to comment.

    CORE INVESTOR PROTECTIONS

    In Europe, Robinhood, Kraken and others operate under the “MiFID” derivatives rules but some legal experts say that law is insufficient to oversee the novel products. Trump’s crypto-friendly chair of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Paul Atkins, has indicated the agency plans to grant would-be issuers exemptions from securities rules. 

    That plan is facing opposition from powerful Wall Street players including Citadel Securities and the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, which say such major structural changes should go through a formal rulemaking process. 

    “Just because a security is represented on blockchain, that doesn’t change the core investor protections and other provisions that apply to securities,” said Peter Ryan, head of international capital markets at SIFMA. 

    In a July letter to the SEC, Citadel Securities raised concerns that tokenization would siphon liquidity away from public markets. 

    Spokespeople for the SEC declined to comment, while Citadel Securities did not provide comment beyond the letter. 

    A spokesperson for the European Securities and Markets Authority, which helps oversee MiFID, said it was aware of the potential risks of tokenization and was monitoring developments. 

    The World Federation of Exchanges recently urged regulators to crack down on tokenization, citing insufficient investor protections and liquidity fragmentation, although the group told Reuters it supports Nasdaq’s proposal because it would treat tokens like traditional stocks.

    Coinbase is also in talks with the SEC about launching tokenized securities that would similarly grant investors the full legal rights and benefits associated with conventional stocks, according to a source familiar with the matter.

    Other issuers said they hew closely to traditional securities, anti-money laundering, bankruptcy protections and other rules. 

    Mark Greenberg, Kraken’s global head of consumer, said the company offered the “gold standard” including 1:1 collateralization and investor disclosures, while dismissing derivative offerings as “IOUs.”

    “Done right, tokenization enhances investor protections, rather than eroding them,” said Ian De Bode, chief strategy officer at Ondo Finance. 

    (Reporting by Hannah Lang in New York and Elizabeth Howcroft in Paris; Editing by Michelle Price and Matthew Lewis)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Reuters

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  • How Steve Schwarzman Landed in Hot Water With His British Neighbors

    TANGLEY, England—Steve Schwarzman once said his business philosophy was to seek war. The Wall Street billionaire may have met his match in the chalk hills of southern England.

    One morning in early September, refrigeration consultant Lawrence Leask woke before 3 a.m., got into his car in pajamas and slippers and waited. It wasn’t long before he spotted his quarry, a water tanker passing through this rural parish. Leask tailed it to the town of Andover to learn where it would eventually unload thousands of gallons of water.

    Copyright ©2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

    Joe Wallace

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  • Deadline looms for Maryland to obligate federal money for schools – WTOP News

    Deadline looms for Maryland to obligate federal money for schools – WTOP News

    Maryland school officials said they are confident they will able to obligate almost $780 million in federal funds in the next 10 days – money that will have to be returned to the federal government if they don’t.

    This article was republished with permission from WTOP’s news partners at Maryland Matters. Sign up for Maryland Matters’ free email subscription today.

    Maryland school officials said they are confident they will able to obligate almost $780 million in federal funds in the next 10 days – money that will have to be returned to the federal government if they don’t.

    The funding is part of $1.95 billion Maryland received in use-it-or-lose-it pandemic-relief funds for schools from the American Rescue Plan’s Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief, or ESSER, program. As of this week, Maryland had spent 60.7% of the total, for $1.18 billion.

    Maryland’s rate of obligating its funds is one of the lowest in the nation, ahead of only Nebraska and the District of Columbia, according to a U.S. Department of Education dashboard.

    In a letter to all states dated Sept. 10, Laura Jimenez, director of state and grantee relations in the department’s ESSER Office, reminded grantees that they have until Sept. 30 to report on how they will commit to draw down the remaining money. States have until Jan. 28, 2025, to liquidate, or spend, the money, but can also request an extension to March 2026.

    That’s what Maryland has done and will do, said Krishna Tallur, deputy state superintendent for the state Department of Education’s Office of Finance and Operations.

    “We believe that all of the funds will be obligated by the deadline and liquated by the extended deadline,” Tallur said in an interview earlier this month.

    The federal dashboard still shows that Maryland spent 59.4% of its allocation, but Tallur said that the number as of July, the most recent available, was actually 60.07%.

    But if the state doesn’t obligate that money, then it goes back to the federal government.

    “At the end of the day, our kids cannot afford for this money to just disappear. This is tax money, right?” said Tracie Potts, executive director of the Eisenhower Institute at Gettysburg College, which released a report last month on ESSER funding.

    The pandemic-era relief money in this third and final round can be used for a variety of needs and services such as summer enrichment programs, upgrades to facilities and mental health support.

    “Federal funds just don’t come out of the air,” Potts said in an interview. “This is money that was designated for our kids to catch up. The question becomes, ‘What are we going to do with it?’”

    Her institute’s report, “Building America: Reinventing Education Funding Education in Maryland During and After the Pandemic,” was completed last fall with data updated through January 2023. The state Department of Education updated a source file last month on what districts spent in federal pandemic-era funding.

    The report offers recommendations for school district officials to invest and evidence-based strategies to address pandemic learning recovery such as community school and summer learning programs. It also highlighted high-impact tutoring, which will be done this school year in Baltimore City.

    Potts said research has shown it’s best for high-impact tutoring to take place during the school day in small groups and done several times a week.

    “Number one, more than likely you’ll be able to get the teachers because they’re already there,” she said. “There are additional costs when we keep kids after school and try to get them there before school. If transportation is not provided, then only the kids who have somebody at home and who’s not working…can pick them up. So that’s an equity issue.”

    Except for the District of Columbia, which had allocated just 44.4% of its funding, according to the federal dashboard this week, all of Maryland’s other neighbors had obligated or spent significantly larger share of their ESSER funding:

    • Delaware reported spending 83.1%, with $69.5 million left to obligate;
    • West Virginia has allocated 79.8%, with $153.9 million left;
    • Virginia spent 77.1%, and had $484.4 million left;
    • and Pennsylvania had spent 77% money, with $1.1 billion left to obligate.

    While Nebraska and D.C. were at the bottom among states, having allocated 56% and 44.4% respectively, Hawaii and Washington state had allocated the largest share among states. Hawaii has spent 93.7% of its $412.5 million, and has $26.2 million left, while Washington had $169.5 million left, having spent 90.9% of its $1.85 billion total.

    California received and spent the most, getting $15 billion and spending $12.3 billion, or 81.5%.

    Del. Bernice Mireku-North (D-Montgomery), who serves on the House Ways and Means Committee, said she didn’t know about the upcoming deadline, or amount left. But she said federal dollars have helped to address pandemic challenges such as food insecurity and laptops for children in her jurisdiction.

    “We will continue our commitment to a world-class education for our children, by making sure they have the resources they need around the state,” she said in an interview Aug. 30. “There’s going to be a point for us to consider how we’re going to fund them once federal money goes away. We’ll continue to work together as a legislature to find the right steps that the gains from those federal resources aren’t lost.”

    The Campaign for Grade Level Reading will host an online discussion Tuesday from what some state education officials learned in applying the ESSER funding to their schools as the “looming ESSER funding cliff” approaches.

    Valerie Bonk

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  • Getting the most ROI from your classroom technology

    Getting the most ROI from your classroom technology

    Key points:

    During the COVID-19 pandemic, school districts across the United States received a timely infusion of funds to upgrade edtech in the classroom. As of 2023, 92 percent of K-12 schools in the U.S. use interactive whiteboards for their daily lessons.

    Given that today’s students are digital natives, it makes sense for schools to invest in modern educational technology such as interactive whiteboards. After all, these students likely learned their ABCs and 123s using their parents’ smartphones or tablets.

    Of course, maintaining this smart technology can be a hefty investment. So, school districts should also take steps to ensure they get the most bang for their buck.

    Why it’s important to maximize usage and value of this investment

    Acquiring and using an interactive whiteboard in the classroom is already a positive development. It immediately replaces at least three archaic pieces of school equipment: a digital projector, a whiteboard, and a TV video player. Instead, students learn from an all-in-one multimedia machine that features full interactivity.

    Academic studies confirm that interactivity and active learning can greatly enhance student engagement in the classroom. What’s more, both teachers and students seem to enjoy learning better when they use interactive whiteboards. That’s why it’s crucial to make sure these tools are available during school hours.

    Constant use of your edtech equipment can ensure a swift return on investment (ROI). But how do you ensure your interactive whiteboards work as advertised? More importantly, how can your instructors maximize the use of the equipment and minimize its downtime?

    Interactive whiteboard features you can maximize

    An interactive whiteboard includes many modern features that help enhance active learning and increase engagement. To make the most of your school district’s edtech investment, these features should be utilized to the fullest during classroom sessions.

    Advanced touchscreen technology in the classroom

    When choosing the best interactive whiteboards, look for ones that feature multi-touch technology. This enables the whiteboard to recognize multiple touchpoints instead of just one point at a time.

    Multi-touch capability can greatly enhance the learning experience. For instance, this technology allows for expanded controls when using the touchscreen. It lets a user pinch, zoom, or swipe the surface to activate functions. What’s more, the number of fingers used when performing these actions will trigger a different response. This puts a wide range of controls literally at your fingertips.

    In addition, multi-touch allows two or more students to interact with a single touchscreen. This lets instructors hold competitive quizzes or have multiple students solve puzzles at the same time.

    Cloud connectivity

    Using cables or memory cards to transfer files or install updates is an inefficient method that can cause a lot of downtime. It’s also unnecessary, as wireless connectivity is already a standard feature for most technology in the classroom. So, make sure your interactive whiteboard investments support cloud systems that use secure and redundant connections.

    Why is cloud connectivity important? During its lifespan, an interactive whiteboard will need continuous updates and fixes to its operating system, firmware, and application software. Connecting via cloud systems ensures that all needed files are available for download. This means installations and updates can be scheduled anytime and processed much faster.

    Access level control and user permissions

    Not all interactive whiteboard users need the same access levels. For instance, regular operators such as instructors and teachers launch learning apps and access the connected learning management system (LMS) for files and modules. Meanwhile, superintendents and principals will need to access student and teacher information and the collected data from users. Admins and IT staff need access to the operating system to perform maintenance and management tasks.

    Assigning different user permission levels is a valuable feature that keeps private data and system files safe. This also ensures that only authorized users can look at private student files, as required by federal and state privacy laws.

    Security and safety

    Curious students will often try to hack into the interactive whiteboard and install apps or games, copy files, or even alter data. But remote security features should easily detect unusual device activity and automatically launch security measures.

    Once alerted, admins can freeze or shut down devices to prevent further attempts at access. In the unlikely case that the touchscreen is taken off-site, geofencing can disable devices that are outside their permitted locations. When everything else fails, admins can remotely wipe data from devices to prevent data theft.

    Don’t forget the right device management platform for your classroom technology

    An interactive whiteboard can be a significant cost. The right device management platform makes sure your classroom technology investments work correctly and receive proper maintenance and management.

    What’s more, it ensures the availability of low-level management features that keep all software and firmware updated to the latest versions. Cloud connectivity lets admins automatically schedule and perform updates during off hours instead of productive school hours. Even better, it can perform these fixes on one specific unit, multiple devices, or across the entire fleet.

    The right device management software also provides robust security features that keep edtech devices from falling into the wrong hands. After all, data privacy is a serious matter that requires strict security measures. With student information at stake, the right device manager can spell the difference between data leaks and secure student records.

    Make the most of your classroom technology investments

    The right classroom technology is crucial to give students the best learning experiences. But simply providing devices such as interactive whiteboards to classrooms isn’t enough. Superintendents must also ensure that their education technology investments have the latest features. This includes multi-touch capability and cloud support to maximize learning opportunities.

    What’s more, school districts should invest in the right device management platforms to ensure devices perform optimally at all times. The right device manager can fulfill the specific management, maintenance, and security requirements of your learning investments.

    We all know the value of modern edtech equipment in enriching the lives of today’s students. Acquiring these devices is only the first step. Admins must also make sure they work as designed and remain optimized and updated at all times.

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    Nadav Avni, Radix Technologies

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  • Pentagon Set To Send Initial $1 Billion In Military Aid To Ukraine Once Bill Clears Senate And President – KXL

    Pentagon Set To Send Initial $1 Billion In Military Aid To Ukraine Once Bill Clears Senate And President – KXL

    WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. officials say the Pentagon is poised to send an initial $1 billion package of military aid to Ukraine as the Senate begins debate on long-awaited legislation to fund the weapons Kyiv needs to stall gains made by Russia.

    The decision Tuesday comes after months of frustration, as bitterly divided members of Congress deadlocked over the funding.

    House Speaker Mike Johnson was forced to cobble together a bipartisan coalition to pass the bill.

    The overall $95 billion foreign aid package is expected to gain Senate approval soon.

    About $61 billion is for Ukraine. President Joe Biden promised Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy the U.S. would send air defense weapons once the Senate approves the bill.

    More about:

    Grant McHill

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  • Etsy’s stock is having its best day in seven months after Elliott takes ‘sizable’ stake

    Etsy’s stock is having its best day in seven months after Elliott takes ‘sizable’ stake


    Investors bought up shares of Etsy Inc. on Thursday after the online crafts marketplace added to its board of directors a partner of hedge fund Elliott Investment Management L.P., which recently acquired a “sizable” stake in the company.

    Etsy
    ETSY,
    +9.31%

    said Marc Steinberg, who is responsible for public- and private-equity investments at Elliott, has been appointed to the board, effective Feb. 5, and will also join the board’s audit committee.

    “Etsy has a highly differentiated position in the e-commerce landscape and a uniquely attractive business model, supported by a distinctive and engaged community,” Steinberg said. “We became a sizable investor in Etsy and I am joining its board because I believe there is an opportunity for significant value creation.”

    Etsy’s stock shot up 8% in afternoon trading, to pare earlier gains of as much as 14.2%. The stock was headed for its best one-day gain since it climbed 9.2% on July 11.

    Elliott’s stake was acquired in recent months, as the fund’s disclosure of equity holdings through the third quarter did not list Etsy shares.

    “Marc’s appointment reflects our ongoing commitment to enhance the perspectives and expertise on the Etsy Board,” said Etsy Chairman Fred Wilson. “We look forward to benefiting from his voice in the boardroom as a seasoned and experienced investor as we continue our journey of creating a leading global e-commerce platform.”

    Etsy now has 10 board members.

    Etsy’s stock has run up 18.6% over the past three months, but has tumbled 48.5% over the past 12 months. That’s compared with the S&P 500 index’s
    SPX
    18.7% rally over the past year.

    Read (December 2023): Etsy to cut 11% of staff as CEO says company is on ‘unsustainable trajectory’

    At an investor conference in December, Chief Executive Josh Silverman said business has slowed since the post-pandemic boom, as people have “had enough of buying things” and are now spending primarily on eating out and travel. Inflation and the loss of government subsidies was also weighing on spending.

    Still, Silverman said, Etsy is now about two and a half times bigger than it was before the pandemic, and the company has more active buyers than it did at the peak of the pandemic.



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  • JetBlue, Spirit Airlines appeal court ruling blocking their proposed merger

    JetBlue, Spirit Airlines appeal court ruling blocking their proposed merger

    JetBlue Airways Corp. and Spirit Airlines Inc. said late Friday that they have appealed a court ruling that earlier this week blocked their planned merger.

    JetBlue
    JBLU,
    -1.19%

    and Spirit
    SAVE,
    +17.19%

    announced the appeal in a terse press release that provided no more details, adding only that the process is “consistent with the requirements of the merger agreement.”

    Wall Street was split on whether the airlines would be legally obliged to appeal the Tuesday ruling, which sided with the Justice Department in saying that a merger between low-cost JetBlue and ultra-low-cost Spirit would hurt competition.

    Shares of Spirit rallied 12% after hours Friday, while JetBlue shares fell nearly 2%. Analysts at JP Morgan said this week that the ruling freed JetBlue from a “costly merger.”

    Earlier Friday, Spirit sought to reassure investors about its liquidity and issued an upbeat fourth-quarter revenue guidance. Spirit has amassed about $5.5 billion in debt, and is reportedly seeking advisers to help restructure it.

    The likelihood of Spirit attracting a new merger or takeover bid is considered low without a debt restructuring. Frontier Group Holdings Inc.
    ULCC,
    -2.13%

    and JetBlue competed for Spirit in 2022, with Frontier ultimately bowing out in July of that year.

    Raymond James analyst Savanthi Syth said in a note earlier Friday that it was “clear to us that Spirit is pressing JetBlue to appeal the antitrust ruling, but we continue to believe the chances of success are low.”

    Syth has estimated that an appeal would take some four to five months.

    Shares of Spirit have lost 67% in the past 12 months, while shares of JetBlue are down 41%. The U.S. Global Jets ETF
    JETS
    has lost 9% in the same period. Those losses contrast with gains of 24% for the S&P 500 index
    SPX.

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  • Oaktree Capital calls commercial real estate ‘most acute area of risk’ right now

    Oaktree Capital calls commercial real estate ‘most acute area of risk’ right now

    Distressed-debt giant Oaktree Capital sees big opportunities in credit unfolding over the next few years as a wall of debt comes due.

    Oaktree’s incoming co-chief executives Armen Panossian, head of performing credit, and Bob O’Leary, portfolio manager for global opportunities, see a roughly $13 trillion market that will be ripe for the picking.

    Within that realm is high-yield bonds, BBB-rated bonds, leveraged loans and private credit — four areas of the market that have only mushroomed from their nearly $3 trillion size right before the 2007-2008 global financial crisis.

    “Clearly, the most acute area of risk right now is commercial real estate,” the co-CEOs said in a Wednesday client note. “That’s because the maturity wall is already upon us and it’s not going to abate for several years.”

    More than $1 trillion of commercial real-estate loans are set to come due in 2024 and 2025, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

    A retreat in the benchmark 10-year Treasury yield
    BX:TMUBMUSD10Y,
    to about 4.1% on Wednesday from a 5% peak in October, has provided some relief even though many borrowers likely will still struggle to refinance.

    Related: Commercial real estate a top threat to financial system in 2024, U.S. regulators say

    “There’s a need for capital, especially for office properties where there are vacancies, rental growth hasn’t materialized, or the rate of borrowing has gone up materially over the last three years. This capital may or may not be readily available, and for certain types of office properties, it absolutely isn’t available,” the Oaktree team said.

    With that backdrop, the firm expects to dust off its playbook from the financial crisis and acquire portfolios of commercial real-estate loans from banks, but also plans to participate in “credit-risk transfer” deals that help lenders reduce exposure.

    Oaktree also sees opportunities brewing in private credit, as well as in high-yield and leveraged loans, where “several hundred” of the estimated 1,500 companies that have issued such debt are likely “to be just fine” even if defaults rise, they said.

    Another area to watch will be the roughly $26 trillion Treasury market, where Oaktree has some concerns “about where the 10-year Treasury yield goes from here” — given not only the U.S. budget deficit and the deluge of supply that investors face, but also how foreign buyers, once the “largest owners in prior years, may be tapped out.”

    Related: Here are two reasons why the 10-year Treasury yield is back above 4%

    U.S. stocks
    SPX

    DJIA

    COMP
    fell Wednesday after strong retail-sales data for December pointed to a resilient U.S. economy, despite the Federal Reserve having kept its policy rate at a 22-year high since July.

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  • Hang Seng leads selloff for Asia stocks, with 4% slump after China data

    Hang Seng leads selloff for Asia stocks, with 4% slump after China data

    TOKYO (AP) — Asian shares slid Wednesday after a decline overnight on Wall Street and disappointing China growth data, while Tokyo’s main benchmark momentarily hit another 30-year high.

    Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225
    NIY00,
    -0.95%

    reached a session high of 36,239.22, but reverted lower, last down 0.3% to 35,477. The Nikkei has been hitting new 34-year highs, or the best since February 1990 during the so-called financial bubble. Buying focused on semiconductor-related shares, and a cheap yen helped boost exporter issues.

    Don’t miss: Wall Street firms catch up to Buffett enthusiasm on Japan as Nikkei keeps hitting records

    Hong Kong’s Hang Seng
    HK:HSCI
    tumbled 4% to 15,220.72, with losses building after data showed China hitting its economic growth target of 5.2% for 2023, surpassing government expectations, but short of the 5.3% some analysts expected. The Shanghai Composite
    CN:SHCOMP
    shed 2% to 2,833.62.

    Read on: China hit its economic-growth target without ‘massive stimulus,’ boasts Premier Li Qiang

    Australia’s S&P/ASX 200
    AU:ASX10000
    slipped 0.2% to 7,401.30. South Korea’s Kospi
    KR:180721
    dropped 2.4% to 2,435.90.

    Investors were keeping their eyes on upcoming earnings reports, as well as potential moves by the world’s central banks, to gauge their next moves.
    Wall Street slipped in a lackluster return to trading following a three-day holiday weekend.

    See: What’s next for stocks as ‘tired’ market stalls in 2024 ahead of closely watched retail sales

    The S&P 500
    SPX
    fell 17.85 points, or 0.4%, to 4,765.98. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA
    dropped 231.86, or 0.6%, to 37,361.12, and the Nasdaq
    COMP
    sank 28.41, or 0.2%, to 14,944.35.

    Spirit Airlines
    SAVE,
    -47.09%

    lost 47.1% after a U.S. judge blocked its takeover by JetBlue Airways
    JBLU,
    +4.91%

    on concerns it would mean higher airfares for flyers. JetBlue rose 4.9%.

    Stocks of banks were mixed, meanwhile, as earnings reporting season ramps up for the final three months of 2023. Morgan Stanley
    MS,
    -4.16%

    sank 4.2% after it said a legal matter and a special assessment knocked $535 million off its pretax earnings, while Goldman Sachs
    GS,
    +0.71%

    edged 0.7% higher after reporting results that topped Wall Street’s forecasts.

    Companies across the S&P 500 are likely to report meager growth in profits for the fourth quarter from a year earlier, if any, if Wall Street analysts’ forecasts are to be believed. Earnings have been under pressure for more than a year because of rising costs amid high inflation.

    But optimism is higher for 2024, where analysts are forecasting a strong 11.8% growth in earnings per share for S&P 500 companies, according to FactSet. That, plus expectations for several cuts to interest rates by the Federal Reserve this year, have helped the S&P 500 rally to 10 winning weeks in the last 11. The index remains within 0.6% of its all-time high set two years ago.

    Treasury yields
    BX:TMUBMUSD10Y
    have already sunk on expectations for upcoming cuts to interest rates, which traders believe could begin as early as March. It’s a sharp turnaround from the past couple years, when the Federal Reserve was hiking rates drastically in hopes of getting high inflation under control.

    The Tell: No rate cuts in 2024? Why investors should think about the ‘unthinkable.’

    Easier rates and yields relax the pressure on the economy and financial system, while also boosting prices for investments. And for the past six months, interest rates have been the main force moving the stock market, according to Michael Wilson, strategist at Morgan Stanley.

    He sees that dynamic continuing in the near term, with the “bond market still in charge.”

    For now, traders are penciling in many more cuts to rates through 2024 than the Fed itself has indicated. That raises the potential for big market swings around each speech by a Fed official or economic report.

    Yields rose in the bond market after Fed governor Christopher Waller said in a speech that “policy is set properly” on interest rates. Following the speech, traders pushed some bets for the Fed’s first cut to rates to happen in May instead of March.

    On Wall Street, Boeing fell to one of the market’s sharper losses as worries continue about troubles for its 737 Max 9 aircraft following the recent in-flight blowout of an Alaska Air
    ALK,
    -2.13%

    jet. Boeing
    BA,
    -7.89%

    lost 7.9%.

    In energy trading, benchmark U.S. crude
    CL00,
    -1.55%

    lost 90 cents to $71.75 a barrel. Brent crude
    BRN00,
    -1.37%
    ,
    the international standard, fell 78 cents to $77.68 a barrel.

    In currency trading, the U.S. dollar
    USDJPY,
    +0.44%

    rose to 147.90 Japanese yen from 147.09 yen. The euro
    EURUSD,
    -0.10%

    cost $1.0868, down from $1.0880.

    MarketWatch contributed to this report

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  • SEC weighing ‘additional measures’ after hacked post on bitcoin ETF approval

    SEC weighing ‘additional measures’ after hacked post on bitcoin ETF approval

    The Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday said that a social-media post on X falsely stating that it had approved spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds was created after an “unauthorized party” obtained control over the phone number connected with the agency’s account on the platform.

    The markets regulator said its staff would “continue to assess whether additional remedial measures are warranted” in the wake of the breach, which occurred Tuesday and raised questions about cybersecurity at both the agency and the social-media platform, formerly known as Twitter.

    The agency said it was coordinating with law enforcement on the matter, including with the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security.

    “Commission staff are still assessing the impacts of this incident on the agency, investors, and the marketplace but recognize that those impacts include concerns about the security of the SEC’s social media accounts,” the SEC said in a statement.

    The confusion began on Tuesday afternoon, when the hacked post appeared on the SEC’s X account.

    “Today the SEC grants approval for #Bitcoin ETFs for listing on registered national securities exchanges,” the post read. “The approved Bitcoin ETFs will be subject to ongoing surveillance and compliance measures to ensure continued investor protection.”

    A second post appeared two minutes later that simply read “$BTC,” the SEC noted in its statement. The unauthorized user soon deleted that second post, but also liked two other posts by non-SEC accounts, according to the agency. The price of bitcoin
    BTCUSD,
    -0.71%

    rose sharply in the wake of the posts, before soon pulling back.

    In response to the hack, SEC staff posted on the official X account of SEC Chair Gary Gensler announcing that the agency’s main account had been compromised, and that it had not yet approved any spot bitcoin exchange-traded products. Staff then deleted the initial unauthorized post, un-liked the liked posts and used the official SEC account to make a new post clarifying the situation, the agency said Friday.

    The SEC also said that it had reached out to X for assistance Tuesday in the wake of the incident, and that agency staff believe the unauthorized access to the SEC’s account was “terminated” later in the day.

    “While SEC staff is still assessing the scope of the incident, there is currently no evidence that the unauthorized party gained access to SEC systems, data, devices, or other social media accounts,” the agency said.

    The following day, the SEC announced that it had, in fact, approved the listing and trading of spot bitcoin ETFs.

    Wednesday’s move marked a breakthrough for the crypto industry, which for years has tried to get such ETFs off the ground in hopes of drawing more traditional investors to the digital-asset space.

    Bitcoin was down 7.6% over a 24-period as of Friday evening.

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  • After Bitcoin ETFs, watch for the next most popular crypto to go the same route

    After Bitcoin ETFs, watch for the next most popular crypto to go the same route

    After long-awaited spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds made their debut this week, investors are now weighing the prospects of eventual approval of similar ether ETFs.

    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Wednesday greenlighted 11 spot bitcoin
    BTCUSD,
    -1.58%

    ETFs for the first time. The products, which made its debut trading on Thursday, logged a relatively strong first day

    However, bitcoin fell 6.8% on Friday, leaving it with a 3.2% gain over the past seven days, according to CoinDesk data. It underperformed ether
    ETHUSD,
    +1.82%
    ,
    which rose 17.6% over the past seven days while it declined 1.2% on Friday.  

    The news about bitcoin ETFs was mostly priced in, while investors are now looking past it to a potential approval of ether ETFs, analysts said.

    “I see value in having an ETH ETF,” Larry Fink, chief executive at the world’s largest asset manager BlackRock, told CNBC’s Squawk Box on Friday. BlackRock, which just launched its iShares bitcoin Trust
    IBIT,
    in November filed an application for a spot ether ETF.

    “It’s hard to know exactly what the U.S. regulators would do” about ether ETF applications, said Alonso de Gortari, chief economist at Mysten Labs, an internet infrastructure company.

    However, “I would expect that once you open the door, it becomes easier and I think the industry is very excited about it,” de Gortari said. If bitcoin ETFs see an impressive institutional inflow in the coming months, it could make such products more established and set a good precedent for other crypto ETF applications, he said.

    Read: Vanguard’s decision to shun bitcoin ETFs triggers backlash — with some customers moving to crypto-friendly competitors like Fidelity

    Also see: Why the debut of bitcoin ETFs could be bad news for crypto stocks, futures ETFs

    The enormous competition and huge inflows into bitcoin ETFs will only boost investors’ interests in an ether ETF, according to Paul Brody, EY’s global blockchain leader. “There’s no doubt that ETH is the next big market and has immediately become a priority for financial services companies,” Brody said in emailed comments.

    Compared with bitcoin, the Ethereum blockchain offers more utility and has unique advantages, noted Fadi Aboualfa, head of research at digital assets custodian Copper. 

    Sandy Kaul, head of digital asset and industry advisory services at Franklin Templeton, said she eventually expects the arrival of ETFs that track a basket of cryptocurrencies. Such products, instead of those based on single crypto, would dominate the space if they are approved, she said.  

    “Just like the S&P 500 has 500 stocks in it, right? You don’t have just one stock.” Kaul said in a phone interview. The arrival of a bitcoin ETF, is just a “baby step into really beginning to think about the future market structure of crypto,” Kaul added. 

    However, not everyone is that optimistic. Will McDonough, founder and chairman of Corestone Capital, said the approval of an Ethereum ETF has “a long way to go.” 

    SEC chairman Gary Gensler previously said bitcoin was the only cryptocurrency he was prepared to publicly label a commodity, rather than a security. 

    The agency also went after companies that offered crypto staking, which allows investors to earn yields by locking their coins to secure blockchains such as Ethereum. The SEC shut down crypto exchange Kraken’s staking business in the U.S. last year.  

    One possibility is that “companies will be able to offer an ETH ETF, but they will not be allowed to stake that ETH and earn yield,” noted EY’s Brody.

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  • Vanguard Won’t Offer Spot Bitcoin ETFs on Its Platform

    Vanguard Won’t Offer Spot Bitcoin ETFs on Its Platform

    Updated Jan. 11, 2024 3:06 pm ET

    Bitcoin’s trip to Main Street just took a detour.

    Vanguard said Thursday it won’t offer the new spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds on its brokerage platform.

    Copyright ©2024 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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  • Bitcoin ETFs finally approved after a chaotic, ‘embarrassing’ 24 hours for SEC

    Bitcoin ETFs finally approved after a chaotic, ‘embarrassing’ 24 hours for SEC

    On Wednesday, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for the first time greenlighted several exchange-traded funds investing directly in bitcoin.

    But the 24 hours leading up to that approval were chaotic, to say the least.

    The SEC approved the launch of 11 bitcoin
    BTCUSD,
    +0.09%

    ETFs, according to a filing posted on the regulatory agency’s website. The ETFs are due to start trading on Thursday.

    On Tuesday, however, the SEC’s official account on X, formerly known as Twitter, published what the agency described as an “unauthorized” post indicating that it had approved the spot bitcoin ETFs. In reality, the regulator had not approved any such ETFs as of Tuesday and its X account had been “compromised,” SEC Chair Gary Gensler said on the social-media platform. The SEC subsequently deleted the unauthorized post.

    The agency found “there was unauthorized access to and activity on” the its X account by “an unknown party,” an SEC spokesperson said on Tuesday, adding that the “unauthorized access has been terminated” and that the SEC would work with law enforcement to investigate the matter.

    Bitcoin’s price briefly shot 2% higher after the unauthorized tweet went out on Tuesday before soon pulling back.

    Then on Wednesday, shortly before the U.S. stock market closed for the day, the SEC posted an actual approval order of bitcoin ETFs on its website — but the link was soon broken, leading to an “error 404” page. The same filing was later reposted by the SEC. 

    It is unclear why the first link was broken. A SEC spokesperson did not respond to an email seeking comment on the matter.

    The events of the past 24 hours have proven “a bit embarrassing” for the SEC, especially as the agency has stressed that cryptocurrencies are exceptionally risky and vulnerable to market manipulation, according to Greg Magadini, director of derivatives at Amberdata. 

    Despite those warnings, Magadini said he doesn’t expect investors to be deterred from investing in the bitcoin ETFs.

    Bitcoin has actually seen lower volatility on Tuesday and Wednesday than options traders had priced in, Magadini said. The crypto was up about 0.4% over the past 24 hours to around $46,400 on Wednesday evening, according to CoinDesk data.

    Investors have been pricing in $1 to $2 billion of initial flows into the bitcoin ETFs.

    Read: Bitcoin in spotlight as SEC approves new ETFs, ether rallies. Here’s why.

    Steven Lubka, head of private clients and family offices at Swan Bitcoin, echoed Magadini’s point, noting that the hiccups on the way to SEC approval are unlikely to impact investor interest in the funds.

    “Ultimately, the SEC is not the one that launches the ETFs,” Lubka said in a call. “If anything, it shows how much attention is on these ETF products.”

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  • SEC Approves Bitcoin ETFs for Everyday Investors

    SEC Approves Bitcoin ETFs for Everyday Investors

    Updated Jan. 10, 2024 5:56 pm ET

    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission voted Wednesday to allow mainstream investors to buy and sell bitcoin as easily as stocks and mutual funds, a decision hailed by the industry as a game changer.

    The SEC decision clears the way for the first U.S. exchange-traded funds that hold bitcoin to be sold to the public. Expectations of U.S. regulatory approval for such funds drove the price of bitcoin to the highest level in about two years. The digital currency fell to just below $46,000 late Wednesday, up from $17,000 in January 2023.

    Copyright ©2024 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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  • Medical Properties Trust Stock Is Crashing

    Medical Properties Trust Stock Is Crashing

    Shares of Medical Properties Trust plummeted after the real estate investment trust said it is ramping up efforts to recover uncollected rent and outstanding loans from its largest tenant.

    Continue reading this article with a Barron’s subscription.

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  • 60-40 mix of stocks, bonds on verge of historic gains ‘after being written off'

    60-40 mix of stocks, bonds on verge of historic gains ‘after being written off'

    The traditional portfolio of stocks and bonds has been on a tear over the past two months as the S&P 500 nears a record high, but it’s the big gains in fixed income that stand out, according to Bespoke Investment Group.

    Fixed-income assets are typically the “insurance” part of the classic 60-40  portfolio, usually holding up during market weakness even if that wasn’t the case in 2022, Bespoke said in a note emailed Thursday. Both stocks and bonds in the U.S. have rallied during the fourth quarter and are up so far in 2023.

    “With just two trading days left in the year, the market is on the verge of history,” Bespoke said. “After being written off for dead in the last year, the traditional 60/40 portfolio of 60% stocks and 40% bonds is within a whisker of its best two-month rally since at least 1990.”

    Read: ‘The switch was flipped’: ETF flows pick up as stocks, bonds head for 2023 gains

    In 2022, bonds failed to provide a cushion in the 60-40 portfolio as the Federal Reserve aggressively raised interest rates to battle surging inflation. Stocks and bonds tanked last year, with the S&P 500
    SPX
    seeing its ugliest annual performance since 2008, when the global financial crisis was wreaking havoc in markets.

    Over the past two months, the classic 60-40 mix has seen a gain of 12.16% based on the total returns of the S&P 500 and Bloomberg Aggregate Bond Index, according to Bespoke. The current rolling two-month performance is stronger than gains seen in the two-month rally after the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic through May 2020, the firm found.


    BESPOKE INVESTMENT GROUP NOTE EMAILED DEC. 28, 2023

    “The only other period that was better for the strategy was the two months ending in April 2009,” the firm said. “Back then, the strategy rallied 12.25%, so if the next two trading days even see marginal gains, the current rally will set the record.”

    Bonds surge

    The Vanguard Total Bond Market ETF
    BND
    and iShares Core U.S. Aggregate Bond ETF
    AGG
    have each seen a total return of slightly more than 7% this quarter through Wednesday, according to FactSet data. 

    That puts the Vanguard Total Bond Market ETF on track for its best quarterly performance on record, while the iShares Core U.S. Aggregate Bond ETF is heading for its biggest total return since 2008, FactSet data show. The iShares Core U.S. Aggregate Bond ETF gained a total 7.4% in the fourth quarter of 2008.

    In April 2009, “the bond leg” of the 60-40 portfolio was up just 1.87% on a rolling two-month basis, while in May 2020 it gained 2.25%, the Bespoke note shows.

    “During this current period, bonds have rallied an unprecedented 8.87%, which far exceeds any other two-month period since at least 1990,” the firm said. “While they still underperformed stocks in the last two months, they have never acted as a smaller drag on the strategy during a period of strength.”

    Read: ‘Cash is a trap,’ warns JPMorgan’s David Kelly. Here’s how a traditional mix of stocks and bonds may pay off.

    Also see: Sitting on cash? Stocks, bonds pay off more when Fed on ‘pause’ than in ‘easing periods,’ BlackRock says

    Bespoke found that the S&P 500, a gauge of U.S. large-cap stocks, is up 14.35% over the last two months on a total-return basis, “which is certainly strong relative to history but not anywhere close to a record.”

    The U.S. stock market was trading slightly higher on Thursday afternoon, with the S&P 500 up 0.2% at around 4,791, according to FactSet data, at last check. That’s within striking distance of the index’s closing peak of 4,796.56, reached Jan. 3, 2022, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

    As stocks were inching higher Thursday afternoon, shares of both the Vanguard Total Bond Market ETF and iShares Core U.S. Aggregate Bond ETF were trading down modestly, according to FactSet data, at last check.

    The yield on the 10-year Treasury note
    BX:TMUBMUSD10Y
    was rising about seven basis points on Thursday afternoon, at around 3.85%, but is down so far this quarter, FactSet data show. Bond yields and prices move in opposite directions. 

    Bond prices are rallying as many investors anticipate the Fed is done hiking rates — and may begin cutting them sometime next year — as inflation has fallen significantly from its 2022 peak.

    As for year-to-date gains, the S&P 500 has surged 26.6% on a total-return basis through Wednesday, while the iShares Core U.S. Aggregate Bond ETF has gained a total 6.1% over the same period, FactSet data show.

    Read: Case for traditional 60-40 mix of stocks and bonds strengthens amid higher rates, according to Vanguard’s 2024 outlook

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  • Utah Nonprofit Awarded U.S. Department of Education EIR Grant for Youth Mental Health Program

    Utah Nonprofit Awarded U.S. Department of Education EIR Grant for Youth Mental Health Program

    SALT LAKE CITY – The Cook Center for Human Connection has been awarded a $3.99 million Education Innovation and Research (EIR) grant from the U.S. Department of Education (DOE) for its program, “Helping Helpers Help: An Integrated Model for Empowering Educators and Parents as Partners in Supporting Student Wellness and Learning.” The Cook Center is among the first awardees to receive EIR funds for a project with an exclusive focus on mental health and suicide prevention as keys to improving school climate and learning. The program will serve 83 middle schools in New Mexico and Arizona by bridging systemic access inequalities to mental health supports, reducing barriers to learning, and helping educators, parents, and caregivers better support young people’s social-emotional well-being.

    The DOE announced $277 million in new grant awards to advance educational equity and innovation, earmarking $87.2 million for programs that support social-emotional well-being, an increase of nearly 20 percent over the previous year. “The Department of Education has recognized that youth mental health is a crisis that threatens the education and well-being of millions of students,” said Anne Brown, CEO and president of the Cook Center. “In a historic move, they have awarded the largest amount of EIR funding to social-emotional learning initiatives, and recognized that our program can provide critical support to underserved communities in addressing mental health challenges that hinder students’ ability to engage and learn.”

    The Cook Center’s model focuses on the protective factors for youth mental health and suicide prevention in which schools and parents play a critical role. Through the grant, the schools will participate in ParentGuidance.org, which includes one-on-one parent coaching for all parents of schoolchildren, interactive mental health series webinars hosted by trained professionals, and a library of on-demand online courses taught by licensed therapists. School faculty and staff will also participate in professional development sessions to complement the resources available to parents. 

    In 2021, the American Academy of Pediatrics declared a national emergency, noting that child and adolescent healthcare professionals are “caring for young people with soaring rates of depression, anxiety, trauma, loneliness, and suicidality that will have lasting impacts on them, their families, and their communities.” Mental health factors have become especially formidable barriers to learning following the pandemic, intensifying a national imperative for innovation in better supporting student mental health and wellness. 

    “The grant awards will fund some of the nation’s most promising efforts to raise the bar for academic recovery, excellence, and equity in education,” said U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cordona. “All of this year’s grantees are pioneering exciting, evidence-based strategies to close opportunity gaps and provide young people with the engaging and impactful learning experiences they deserve so that they can achieve at high levels.”

    Research has established that school-based mental health and suicide programs that engage parents can increase the effectiveness of all interventions. The Cook Center’s newly funded project will serve two high-need areas: New Mexico, which has the second-highest suicide rate in the nation; and Arizona, where the suicide rate is 35% higher than the national rate. The EIR grant will advance the Cook Center’s model through pilot testing and iterative improvements, new culturally and linguistically responsive resources, and rigorous evaluation that addresses critical research gaps. 

    Though only two years old, the Cook Center’s model has already been adopted by 229 districts and 3,617 schools, offering more than 2.4 million families access to services across 37 states. The grant offers an opportunity to accelerate the adoption. For more information about the Cook Center’s work and its resources, visit CookCenterforHumanConnection.org.

    About the Cook Center for Human Connection

    The mission of the Cook Center is to bring together the best organizations, programs, and products to prevent suicide, provide mental health support, and enhance the human connections vital for people to thrive. The foundation’s current focus is on supporting children, families, and schools with youth mental health resources and on the goal of eradicating suicide. This work is accomplished through various grants to schools, programs for parents, and global resources to bring greater awareness to the support needed for those affected by mental health needs and suicide. It’s free resources created to support child mental health and suicide prevention include My Life Is Worth Living™, the first animated series about teen mental health and suicide prevention, and ParentGuidance.org, a mental health resource giving parents the tools to have important conversations at home. The content includes free on-demand courses taught by licensed therapists and family mental health nights hosted by trained professionals. Learn more at CookCenterforHumanConnection.org.

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