[Reuters] Reassuring Chinese data nudges shares higher
[Reuters] Wall Street higher as banks rise after Citi results
[Reuters] Oil prices edge lower as China's GDP growth slows
[Reuters] Trump sees slowing Chinese growth pressuring Beijing on trade
[Reuters] China second quarter GDP growth slows to 6.2% year-on-year, 27-year low
[Reuters] China home price growth cools in June, but investment quickens
[Reuters] China June industrial output up 6.3% y/y, beats forecasts, retail sales up 9.8%
[Reuters] China says will freeze out U.S. companies that sell arms to Taiwan
[Reuters] Groping for new tools, central banks look at Japan's yield controls
[NBC] Trump weighs ousting Commerce chief Wilbur Ross after census defeat
[Reuters] South Korea calls Japan reports of North Korea sanctions breach 'grave challenge'
[Bloomberg] China’s Growth Slides to Weakest Pace in Almost Three Decades
[Bloomberg] Full-Blown Currency War Can No Longer Be Ruled Out, Pimco Says
[Bloomberg] Not Everyone Gets a Piece of China's $2 Trillion Pie
[Bloomberg] India Lender Shares Hit Six-Year Low as Lending Grinds to a Halt
[NYT] China’s Economic Growth Slows as Trade War With U.S. Deepens
[WSJ] Slowing Growth Raises Pressure on China’s Stimulus Efforts
[FT] Debt in developing economies hits all-time high
[FT] Trump’s currency war rhetoric persists as Powell prepares to act
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Sunday, July 14, 2019
Sunday Evening Links
[Reuters] Asian shares, dollar brace for China GDP
[The Hill] Trump puts hopes for Fed revolution on unconventional candidate
[Reuters] U.S. proposes barring big tech companies from offering financial services, digital currencies
[Reuters] Exclusive: U.S. firms may get nod to restart Huawei sales in 2-4 weeks - official
[Reuters] China second-quarter GDP growth set to slow to 6.2%, 27-year low, as trade war bites
[Reuters] U.S. Fed seen launching repo facility in early 2020: Deutsche Bank
[Reuters] Erdogan says Turkey will make serious rate cuts: Haberturk
[SCMP] China to Conduct Military Exercises Near Taiwan After US Agrees US$2.2 billion Arms Deal
[Bloomberg] China's Stock Market Is Flashing Too Many Warning Signs
[Bloomberg] China Struggles Add to Emerging-Market Risks as Rate Cuts Beckon
[WSJ] Oxymoron Alert: Some ‘High Yield’ Bonds Go Negative
[The Hill] Trump puts hopes for Fed revolution on unconventional candidate
[Reuters] U.S. proposes barring big tech companies from offering financial services, digital currencies
[Reuters] Exclusive: U.S. firms may get nod to restart Huawei sales in 2-4 weeks - official
[Reuters] China second-quarter GDP growth set to slow to 6.2%, 27-year low, as trade war bites
[Reuters] U.S. Fed seen launching repo facility in early 2020: Deutsche Bank
[Reuters] Erdogan says Turkey will make serious rate cuts: Haberturk
[SCMP] China to Conduct Military Exercises Near Taiwan After US Agrees US$2.2 billion Arms Deal
[Bloomberg] China's Stock Market Is Flashing Too Many Warning Signs
[Bloomberg] China Struggles Add to Emerging-Market Risks as Rate Cuts Beckon
[WSJ] Oxymoron Alert: Some ‘High Yield’ Bonds Go Negative
Sunday's News Links
[Reuters] Pelosi sets spending demands for two-year budget deal
[Reuters] South Korea trade ministry to raise Japan export curbs at WTO general council meeting
[Reuters] Indian housing lender DHFL warns it may not survive as a going concern
[Reuters] After Taiwan buys arms, China holds military drills on southeast coast
[Bloomberg] Central Banks Are Tossing Grenades Rather Than Firing Bazookas
[WSJ] Manufacturers Move Supply Chains Out of China
[WSJ] Second-Quarter Earnings to Test Soaring Market
[FT] Tech crunch could herald US ‘earnings recession’
[Reuters] South Korea trade ministry to raise Japan export curbs at WTO general council meeting
[Reuters] Indian housing lender DHFL warns it may not survive as a going concern
[Reuters] After Taiwan buys arms, China holds military drills on southeast coast
[Bloomberg] Central Banks Are Tossing Grenades Rather Than Firing Bazookas
[WSJ] Manufacturers Move Supply Chains Out of China
[WSJ] Second-Quarter Earnings to Test Soaring Market
[FT] Tech crunch could herald US ‘earnings recession’