Monday, September 2, 2024

Tuesday's News Links

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Stocks Fall Before Manufacturing Data; Yen Rallies: Markets Wrap

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Oil Drops With Weak Chinese Demand Overshadowing Libya Outage

[Reuters] Stocks tiptoe towards US manufacturing, jobs data

[Reuters] Morning Bid: Labor Day to labor report as Sept kicks off

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] US Jobs Data Return to Center Stage as Fed Mulls Rate-Cut Size

[Reuters] Fed policymakers agree on need for rate cuts, but their reasons vary

[Reuters] French finance ministry's deficit warning adds to Macron's political headache

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Citadel Securities, Jane Street on Track for Record Revenue Haul

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Shorts are circling some of the AI boom’s biggest question marks

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] China Responds to Canada’s EV Tariffs With Rapeseed Probe

[CNBC] JPMorgan economist says China’s housing market crash is still not over

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Ueda Reiterates That BOJ Will Lift Rates If Outlook Realized

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Brazil’s Economy Surges in Second Quarter on Consumer Spending

[Reuters] Brazil's government considers taxing big techs if revenue falls short

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] New Argentine Currency Launched to Offset Milei’s Shock Therapy

[Axios] U.S. seizes Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro's plane

[NYT] Why It’s So Hard for China to Fix Its Ailing Economy

[WSJ] Americans Are Really, Really Bullish on Stocks

[FT] Concern over housing costs hits record high across rich nations

[FT] Active ETFs set to hit $1tn in assets

[FT] Dozens killed in Russian strike on military institute in central Ukraine

[FT] Insurers face $151bn in yearly losses from natural disasters, report forecasts

[FT] How China’s coastguard is ‘trying to occupy the ocean’

Monday Evening Links

[CNBC] Stock futures are little changed to kick off September trading: Live updates

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Asian Stocks Look Steady as China Concerns Mount: Markets Wrap 

[Reuters] US military says Yemen's Houthis attacked two crude oil tankers in Red Sea

[FT] Americans are losing faith in four-year college degrees

[FT] The far-right’s disturbing success in eastern Germany