Tuesday, September 14, 2021

Wednesday's News Links

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] US Steady, Europe Stocks Slip with Treasuries: Markets Wrap

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] China Stocks Battered by Economic Data, Evergrande Non-Payment

[Reuters] Asian stocks stumble as weak China data fan global growth worries

[CNBC] Mortgage demand from homebuyers jumps to highest level since April, after new listings rise all summer

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] China’s Economy Weakens on Delta Outbreak and Wary Consumers

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] China Tells Banks Evergrande Won’t Pay Interest Next Week

[Reuters] China Evergrande's liquidity crisis deepens, report flags interest payment miss

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] China Property Slowdown Deepens as Evergrande Hurts Outlook

[Reuters] China's factory, consumer sectors stumble on COVID-19 disruptions

[Reuters] Fitch says possible China Evergrande default may have broader effects

[Reuters] China's new home prices grow at slowest pace in eight months on cooling measures

[Reuters] Analysis: ECB sees a new inflation 'hump' as prices surge

[Reuters] Canada's annual inflation rate in August hits 4.1%, highest since 2003

[Reuters] UK inflation soars to 9-year high on rebound from restaurant discount scheme

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Priciest Food Since 1970s Is a Big Challenge for Governments

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Wall Street Chiefs Meet China Officials Amid Market Turmoil

[Reuters] North and South Korea conduct duelling missile tests as arms race heats up

[Bloomberg] Evergrande Gives China an Impossible Equation to Solve

[WSJ] What’s Your Raise Really Worth? Inflation Has Something to Say About It.

[WSJ] Census Figures Show Americans’ Incomes Fell in 2020

[WSJ] China’s Property Curbs Send Economic Tremors

[WSJ] China Goes Cold Turkey on Property

[WSJ] High Steel Prices Have Manufacturers Scrounging for Supplies

[FT] Chinese land auction blunder undercuts Xi’s inequality crusade

[FT] Chip prices set to rise into next year as TSMC increases rates

[FT] Why Europe fears a gas crunch even before winter demand begins

[FT] Cryptocurrency: rise of decentralised finance sparks ‘dirty money’ fears